Nowadays climate change is an unavoidable topic of discussion. Whether you're online on social media, or offline having a conversation with family and friends somebody will bring up their side of the argument. Personally I'm a climate change denier. I feel there's a more sinister cause behind the change in weather, and that while it does deal with humankind's interference I think it's more controlled than one might think, and purposefully so. Enter Brad's conspiracy theory of storm seeding. A deep seeded theory for a different time, and place ...
At the end of the day everybody including myself likes to throw their two cents worth in on the subject, and while the topic of climate change is interesting enough to entertain it all boils down to a lot of assumptions, and uncertainty. We just don't know for sure. The developers of this particular game take that very notion into account in an extreme yet not so far fetched way themselves. While there is little story handed to the player in "The Aquatic Adventure of the Last Human" at the start the plot is hinted at continuously through a time referenced cinematic intro, and holo-deck recordings of a textual nature that allow the climatic demise of the human species to unfold in stride via a ambient Metroidvania experience.
When the game opens up we, the gamer, see a ship fly from Earth towards a wormhole during the Earth's future. The launch date into said void is 2971 AD to be exact. A time when Earth was flooded and frozen over due to the escalation of weather events, and it's surviving populous made to live in underwater cities as a last resort. The pilot enters the wormhole in search of a new place to live, but returns thousands of years later to a future Earth where humans were made extinct by their continued tampering of nature's creations. Seems they didn't learn their lesson the first time around, and thus the pilot of this story is left to find that out the hard way. Crash landing on the frozen watery planet the pilot dives deeper, and deeper ultimately discovering that he is the only human left, and that what lurks in the depths might just wipe out himself along with all of humanity's historical achievements.
At the end of the day everybody including myself likes to throw their two cents worth in on the subject, and while the topic of climate change is interesting enough to entertain it all boils down to a lot of assumptions, and uncertainty. We just don't know for sure. The developers of this particular game take that very notion into account in an extreme yet not so far fetched way themselves. While there is little story handed to the player in "The Aquatic Adventure of the Last Human" at the start the plot is hinted at continuously through a time referenced cinematic intro, and holo-deck recordings of a textual nature that allow the climatic demise of the human species to unfold in stride via a ambient Metroidvania experience.
When the game opens up we, the gamer, see a ship fly from Earth towards a wormhole during the Earth's future. The launch date into said void is 2971 AD to be exact. A time when Earth was flooded and frozen over due to the escalation of weather events, and it's surviving populous made to live in underwater cities as a last resort. The pilot enters the wormhole in search of a new place to live, but returns thousands of years later to a future Earth where humans were made extinct by their continued tampering of nature's creations. Seems they didn't learn their lesson the first time around, and thus the pilot of this story is left to find that out the hard way. Crash landing on the frozen watery planet the pilot dives deeper, and deeper ultimately discovering that he is the only human left, and that what lurks in the depths might just wipe out himself along with all of humanity's historical achievements.