I came into Versus: The Deatscapes with a bittersweet taste after my experience reading through The Hero Project: Open Season, leaning on the statement that this was meant to be the last entry in the merge of these two universes. The first Heroes Rise trilogy was one the most exhilarating experiences in the CoG titles, and Zachary Sergi was one of their best authors. I expected a conclusion, blindly hoping for a satisfying payoff in the same level of skill the author had already demonstrated to be capable of. At some point along the way, he stopped focusing on making stories that stood on their own and began imprinting his world views and personal experiences into his games, to the culminating point of shoving them down people's throats. These games do not feel like stories to be experienced and molded by the player, but conversations with Zachary's inner psyche, so much so that he titles the entire grouping of them the "Sergiverse", after his name. While this was most prominent in T...
VERSUS: The Deathscapes
- Release Date:
- May 27, 2021
- Developer:
- Choice of Games
- Publisher:
- Choice of Games
- Platforms:
- Windows Mac Linux
Game Tags
About This Game
Versus: The Death Scapes is the long-awaited finale to The Versus Trilogy, which also answers ALL rising questions left lingering in the Choice of Games Sergiverse! Lose yourself in ten diverse romances, navigate the politics of three massive world orders and unlock dozens of alternate endings. MemoryTravel to new worlds and fight in the most epic battles Versus has ever seen.
- Play as gay, straight, bi, pan, or ace. Dozens of gender identifications.
- 30K word romance-focused prologue
- Dozens of alternate endings
- Every question about the Choice of Games Sergiverse answered
Screenshots
User Reviews
So I was super excited for this book, it was promised to be a great conclusion and crossover to answer the questions raised at the end of the Hero Project sequels. Alas, I was sadly disappointed with Versus: the Deathscapes for a few huge reasons. This game was called "the conclusion to the VERSUS trilogy" but in all honesty it felt like more of a build up to whatever is supposed to come next. It also promised a tie-in with the Heroes Rise series... but that never came and left me really disappointed, since I really only picked up Versus in the hopes of finding out what happens to my hero from the original Heroes Rise trilogy in the first place. I really dislike the Hero Project sequels to the Heroes Rise trilogy but I read them both for this same reason of following my original protagonist. Apart from this extremely unsatisfying finish and lack of Heroes Rise tie-ins, you spend 2 previous books building up relationships (and romances) with characters only to have most of them taken ...
This is the conclusion to Versus series. Except there is no conclusion. Deathscapes mostly drops all plot threads from previous games. The politics from Trials, nah dropped. Romances, mostly absent. The scary abominate? Casually dispatched by the Villain. Also the books namesake area, the Deathscapes is present as extremely dangerous, then mostly casually skipped. Whats not skipped is the pseudo-philosophical babble introducing not one but two religions, that don't really matter after the introduction. Noticing a pattern? Everything in this books feels so rushed, shallow and meaningless. It should have been delayed by a year, so the author could flesh out everything. And last two crimes it commits are the absence of an conclusion of any kind and shilling a comic book at the end. The "ending" of this books set up a arguably more interesting event to come, think Mass effect one Sovereign and reapers, [spoiler] Vaccus being a scout and the real blot army approaching from the galactic...
It seems to me like the author got bored of his original concept of the whole "stuck on a hunger games esque planet with a bunch of aliens", and in the end it rushes through events that had been building up since the first book. If the series had relied more on its first concept and skipped the hundreds of boring floaty dream-flashbacks that take up 90% of the books of characters you don't give a shit about then this series could have been something interesting. Furthermore I chose to stay neutral in the lackluster conflict of the second game and instead of giving that option its own path, you are thrust into one of the ideologies which potentially goes against your chosen romance option. In the second book, it's explained that you don't really have a choice in the matter which is incredibly ironic for a "choose your own adventure game". But none of that matters anyway [spoiler]since almost the entire original cast (including your romance options) are incapacitated at the start of the...
I wish there was a way to make a neutral recommendation. I'm sure some people will love this game, especially if they loved the first two - I'd say it's worth paying the money to find out. My objections below are quite personal and I'm not sure how many players will share them. They revolve around the romance subplot; if that's not something you're interested in, my review can be safely skipped, but fellow romance junkies may want to read on. Mild spoilers ahead! I did enjoy the first two games and the first bit of this one was just as interesting. Unfortunately, it started to fall apart when [spoiler]my chosen love interest - the one my character was finally starting to develop a real relationship with - disappeared for what felt like most of the story[/spoiler]. It then [i]completely[/i] fell apart when [spoiler]that chosen love interest turned out to be someone else entirely, someone I didn't want to romance at all[/spoiler]. I don't know if this happens with all the romance option...
Game was very disappointing and leaves you on a cliffhanger with no satisfying conclusion.
I loved the sense of being thrown into a whole new world in Book 1, and enjoyed the thought of learning more about the mystery and characters of Versus. Book 2 enhanced my fulfillment of the series by turning it into a story of intrigue and politics, where it wasn't just about beating stuff up, but about simply surviving against something more massive than your puny mortal power or comprehension. ....I feel like book 3 took all that suspense and character development and shoved it out the window. I was fine when half of the cast was put on the bus, since I understood it was a chance to develop other characters. I liked how the stakes were raised, even if the tonal shift was a bit abrupt. I just felt let-down by the pay-off. All the investigating, politicking, and careful character choices were rendered moot. I mean, it's a game. It was always going to be moot, but it would've been more fun getting to that point if the ending had been satisfying. It was not. And now I'm disappointed -...
FInally, it is the end of the Versus Series, I liked initial Heroes Trilogy by the author. It was greatly written, so I got into this series. Firstly, kudos to the author for the extensive world building and character backgrounds. Unfortunately, for me it was a lot gibberish mumbo-jumbo that was tedious for me to replay past games and refresh, this was an issue of other spin-off series as well. The summary recap was good enough. World building aside, the core story is actually [spoiler] You an alien must work with other aliens of same galaxy must find galaxy savior to beat alien from another galaxy and be new galaxy superheroes [/spoiler], too bad there is alot of new gameplay and character infos thrown in consistently to enjoy the story. Lot of character development written nicely but way too deep to be cared for. Romance subplot is almost none. I bought this just to know the ending of the series. Gameplay, the motivation and final choices are very good too. Buy only if you are a fan...
I think there’s only a handful of games that has impacted me where my reality has been shifted to absorb this change; With this game now becoming another one, I have to write a detailed review that emasculates just how much I’ve learnt about myself and connected with characters from this novel. First and foremost, we must take into consideration that it took the author 5 years to complete the final book which I believe waiting for, was worth it. However, some spelling mistakes and bugs do appear erratically; less than 10 mistakes altogether which is tolerable considering it is a 30k worded game after all. One thing new readers must be prepared for is that with every book, an overhaul of changes come into play, either in the stats screen or in the direction that the game is headed. It was clear here compared to the previous books that things were very linear. With a plethora of things going your way for once, it was an unusual change from the first two books, seeming much... easie...
I really enjoyed the first two parts of the series, but the last one was really boring. The third one was full of lots of boring battles, messy plot, and less romantic scenes than the first two, to be honest, I have no interest in Who Dhanthik is, and he runs through it to the end
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System Requirements
Minimum
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS *: Windows 7
Recommended
- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
FAQ
How much does VERSUS: The Deathscapes cost?
VERSUS: The Deathscapes costs $5.99.
What are the system requirements for VERSUS: The Deathscapes?
Minimum: Minimum: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system OS *: Windows 7 Recommended: Recommended: Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
What platforms is VERSUS: The Deathscapes available on?
VERSUS: The Deathscapes is available on Windows PC, macOS, Linux.
Is VERSUS: The Deathscapes worth buying?
VERSUS: The Deathscapes has 44% positive reviews from 16 players.
When was VERSUS: The Deathscapes released?
VERSUS: The Deathscapes was released on May 27, 2021.
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