Ultros Is a Psychedelic Voyage to the Outer Limits of Gaming

Remember when games were mysterious? When all you had to go on was context, trial and error, and whatever that slim little instruction manual told you? Most games today are desperate to be understood, walking you by the hand through tutorials and training stages, teaching you exactly how to interact with it and explore it within the game itself. That’s cool, but who doesn’t like feeling confused every now and again? Piecing things together on your own time used to be a core part of playing games, and although it’s not completely a lost art today, it’s not nearly as common as it used to be. If you miss that feeling, play Ultros.
Ultros wants you to come to it. It wants you to unravel its idiosyncrasies without too much help, letting you discover its arcane rules and goals on no set schedule. Its interest in the psychedelic experience goes past the surface trappings of sight and sound, tapping into the dread, chaos, and disorientation that run parallel with the unsteady footing of an expanded consciousness. Ultros wants to bewilder and unsettle you, and what Ultros wants, Ultros gets.
It also offers hope, though. It promises an awakening, an ascension, the power and progress of reinvention at the heart of psychedelia, and although it might not offer any actual epiphanies, it does deliver that sense of accomplishment and pride in a job well done you hope to find in games.
This is a game where you constantly cycle through life and death in a boundless technicolor void known as the Sarcophagus, simultaneously adrift in space and rooted in soil. Where you encounter characters who aren’t quite sure why they’re there or what they’re doing, and who refer to off-screen lives that may or may not ever be explained within the game. Where you regularly bathe in a robotic orb filled with tie-dye amniotic fluid to save your game. Where you realize, several cycles deep, that you need to extend a chain of consciousness by hand throughout this sprawling spaceship for vague, indistinct reasons. Playing Ultros is gaming in a cloud of color and confusion, a perpetually exciting state of being that evokes the earliest days of videogames while still feeling ahead of its time.