![]() Where the “normal” Geometry Wars map is a large square plane, the adventure mode has you traversing lots of different shapes that the plane is wrapped around. I do not enjoy any of these levels, and it is because they all feel like gimmicks that do not deliver anything other than frustration. In an expanded version of GW2’s Sequence mode, you move through a series of levels that function as puzzles to be solved with your little shooty space ship. Geometry Wars 3 adds an additional adventure mode to this basic gameplay. It works exactly the same as the previous game. You do this until you run out of time or out of lives. You shoot all the enemies, and you collect the geoms that they poop out in order to increase your score multiplier. Some of those enemies actively want to kill you. You are navigating through a space where enemies can appear. The basic gameplay is the same in that you are controlling a little spaceship thing that can shoot in three hundred and sixty five degrees around itself. The facts of the game are pretty straight forward: there are “classic” modes based around time attack and high score play, as well as the “gimmicks” of Waves, Pacifism and King (if you don’t know what those are, don’t worry about it). I wanted to be destroyed, willfully.Īnd none of that happened. I wanted to see the bright flashy explosions on a TV double the size of the one I owned in college. I wanted to feel the skin on my thumbs get rigid and weird after two weeks of near-constant play. Like a fool, I jumped at the chance to review Geometry Wars 3: Dimensions. After months of destroying my mind and body in pursuit of this horrible, unattainable state of being better-than, I moved on to something else. The scores were ghosts of play sessions long past, and I was chasing them, trying to prove myself. Eventually I found out that I had been competing with people who didn’t even have a gaming console any more. I couldn’t progress or get better, but that didn’t keep me from trying. Friends’ scores would float there in the corner, taunting me. After a game I would open and close them purposefully, like you would if you had been staring at the sun, and they would get stuck in the transition. ![]() I would stare at Geometry Wars: Retro Evolved 2 and the orbs would dry out. I had developed a poisonous habit that kept me from doing any valuable work, was effecting my relationship, and kept me from blinking for hours on end.
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