Available tomorrow as a digital title for the PlayStation 3, and on Wednesday also as a digital title for the PC, and Xbox 360.
Available for the PC, through the PlayStation Store on the PlayStation 3, and as an Xbox LIVE Arcade title in 2013.
I don't know art, but I know what I like, and this ain't it.
A few weeks ago, I was watching Adult Swim pretty late at night when I came across a psychedelic piece of animation. What I saw felt like some sort of fever dream. I assumed that the swirling colors and morphing images were part of the station identification bumps, but it just kept going and I was transfixed, unable to change the channel. I eventually realized that this was an actual animated short and when it was over I blinked a couple times and decided that I didn’t get what I had just seen, though I could understand why it might rock the socks off of someone else. This is exactly how I feel about Dyad, a game that I can appreciate as something unique and artistic, and yet something that is simply not my cup of tea.
After months of Xbox 360 exclusivity, Child of Eden has finally made its way to the PlayStation 3. Was the wait worth it?
Child of Eden is not a game that can be easily described—it needs to be experienced. At its core it’s a simple arcade style shooter and the controls couldn’t be easier to pick up, but there is so much more to this game than those simple elements. Child of Eden is a visceral experience in the purest meaning of the word. Simply put, it’s a game you won’t soon forget.