

No matter the decisions made, the story in Detroit is gritty and coarse. While its heaviness will make me take a break before playing it again, make no mistake, I will play it again. Not only can I play Detroit again and again, I want to play more and more. That’s probably the biggest attraction to Detroit for me. I could literally play Detroit a few more times without seeing everything that it has to offer. I could see that other paths lead me to a whole area of the game that I hadn’t even seen. Each level had a flow chart that showed the selections that were made. In Detroit, each decision carries the weight of changing the story and even the message of the entire game.Īnother reason each decision mattered so much was because every choice I made could impact whether or not a character lived or died. For example, when I play a TellTale game, the choices matter but most of the time the choices all lead toward the same result. More so than any game with choices that I’ve played in the past, the choices matter in Detroit. Most of these endings have only subtle differences, but there are a few basic endings that are entirely different from each other. The game’s message really boils down to the choices you make because the choices really do matter. I know that each path will eventually lead me to a totally different story altogether. This gives Detroit such a great ability to be replayed. The decisions you make will be the difference. Maybe you have all the pieces for one story and everything works out or nothing works out. Perhaps instead it’s about a few glitchy androids and the need to take care of them. All of the characters Markus interacts with are androids further proving this game isn’t about how the androids are all alike but rather how unique they are.ĭepending on how you were to play, the story might be more about a violent and bloody civil rights movement. Markus gets the biggest selection of good characters to choose from with characters like North and Josh. Connor works in the police department and there is no shortage of anti-android sentiment but his partner, Hank is a complex character who I didn’t fully understand until the end of the game. I felt like Alice might have a lot more to say if only I had been given the chance but I chose wrong and my time with Kara ended quickly. Alice was shy and had to be coaxed into talking. My choices didn’t give me the option to see much of Kara’s interactions with her story arc, but I saw the potential in Alice. It was refreshing to be able to control the destiny of the characters I had been playing.Įach of the characters had their own support characters that I as a player had to interact with.

Some individuality is based totally on the selections you make throughout Detroit.
#Play detroit become human pc for android
Markus was a well trusted and cared for android owned by a rich artist who believes in the humanity of androids until they are driven apart due to story elements out of your control. Kara lived with her abusive owner and his daughter Alice as a maid/nanny. Some of this had to do with their environment. However, with Connor, Markus, and Kara, there was so much individuality. In a game about androids, I really did expect there to be a lot of redundancy between the main characters. Jesse Williams brings Markus to life and his acting was the best in the entire game. In Detroit these breathtaking stories are brought to life by a few different androids that you control living very different lives. Above anything else I can tell you, the story was truly amazing. More accurately, it’s all about the stories. Remember though, that Detroit is all about the story.
#Play detroit become human pc Pc
While Detroit has been out since April of 2018 on the PS4, how did it hold up on the PC? As someone who had never played it, I had the opportunity to experience it first on the PC and get a first hand understanding of how it would perform in that space.

Detroit was so enjoyable, I consider it as the best game I played in 2019.
