Dark Matter (video game) explained

Dark Matter
Developer:Interwave Studios
Platforms:Windows, Linux, macOS
Released:October 17, 2013
Genre:Platform game, survival horror
Modes:Single-player
Engine:Unity

Dark Matter is an indie metroidvania/survival horror video game developed by Interwave Studios and published by Iceberg Interactive for the Windows, Linux and macOS in 2013.[1]

Development

Interwave Studios intended the game to be developed by a team of six and completed within a year. It was clear that one year into production, the game was not in a complete state. With funds running low, Interwave launched a Kickstarter crowdfunding campaign in June 2013, hoping to raise £50,000. The campaign failed, leading to the development team being laid off that summer.[2]

The game was released in a truncated form in October 2013, offering four levels, and with its ending missing. The intention was that sales of the game could fund the rehiring of the development staff. Both the management team at Interwave and the publishers at Iceberg were unaware that the ending was missing, and temporarily pulled the game from Steam in response.[3] A cinematic ending was patched into the game later that October.[4]

Reception

Dark Matter received negative reviews from critics, such as a review score of 4/10 from GameSpot.[5] Reviewers and players criticized the game's abrupt ending, leading to refunds being offered by GOG[6] and the game being temporarily pulled from Steam.[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: McElroy . Griffin . 2012-12-10 . Dark Matter gameplay trailer tosses survival horror mechanics into Metroidvania mix . 2022-12-31 . Polygon . en-US.
  2. Web site: Dark Matter pulled from Steam, after team is laid off. Mike Rose. Gamasutra. 2013-10-22. 2017-03-14.
  3. Web site: The Dark Matter debacle: Interwave responds. Mike Rose. Gamasutra. 2013-10-22. 2017-03-14.
  4. Web site: New Ending Now In. [ICE]_Beastman. 2013-10-31. 2017-03-14.
  5. Web site: Dark Matter (2013) Review - GameSpot. Matt Cabral. GameSpot. 23 August 2015.
  6. Web site: Dark Matter apparently incomplete, GOG offers refunds and revises game description. PC Gamer. 22 October 2013. 23 August 2015. Birnbaum. Ian.
  7. Web site: Dark Matter pulled from Steam over abrupt ending. GamesRadar+. 22 October 2013. 23 August 2015.