It’s a relatively obscure, old game that I’d say is essentially Atomic Heart before the actual Atomic Heart showed up; due to the game taking place in the USSR (Stalin’s USSR no less!) where the USSR supposedly made a psychic antenna to turn everyone in the USSR into supermen to ensure a global victory of Communism (this part feels Trotskyist, not something Stalin would do); and of course, the experiment goes wrong because of course it does; and everyone’s now either dead or a silent hill-esque monster.

Every East European (especially Russians) here would know what I’m talking about, as the game was mostly popular in those areas.

EDIT: In case anyone’s wondering, no I have not played it. But I will say that I’ve heard this was going to get a remake, wonder what happened to it

  • MarxStuff
    link
    81 year ago

    i could swear it was made by ukrainian fascists or another type of anti-communist vermin

    • @Shrike502
      link
      81 year ago

      Probably a Russian liberal. So you know, not far off

      • alunyanneгs 🏳️‍⚧️♀️OP
        link
        5
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        The Russian Wikipedia lists the developers as being from Al-Ukraina, and a quick google search of their studios reveal they’re all Ukraina-based. The only thing Russian about them is the publisher (I’m surprised they allowed an Anti-USSR game to be published, I thought the USSR is supposed to be Russia’s pride and joy, even after 15 years of USSR’s collapse…)

        What a shame. All this time I thought it was made by one Russian dude. But now I understand why the USSR was painted so negatively now that I know Ukrainians made it.

        • @Shrike502
          link
          51 year ago

          Well that would explain a lot tbh.

          (I’m surprised they allowed an Anti-USSR game to be published, I thought the USSR is supposed to be Russia’s pride and joy, even after 15 years of USSR’s collapse

          Not sure where you got that idea. USSR-bashing has been a popular sport long before USSR collapse, and certainly after

          • alunyanneгs 🏳️‍⚧️♀️OP
            link
            31 year ago

            USSR-bashing has been a popular sport long before USSR collapse

            if that’s the case, how come 3/4rd of the soviets voted against pizza hut man’s decision to forcefully terminate the USSR? and then there’s this picture, clearly glorifying russia’s past as being a soviet state, not just the russian empire days

            • @Shrike502
              link
              41 year ago

              Don’t confuse Victory imagery with relationship with USSR. Even many libs don’t disagree that Nazis were terrible and needed to be removed. Also don’t confuse the view from back then, when USSR was fresh on people’s minds, with the now. It’s been thirty years. Thirty years of non-stop propaganda. And yes, even back then it was popular. All those Samizdat papers, all those radio lovers listening to RFE, all those scathing jokes told in kitchens.