Publisher: Codemasters
Platforms: PS3, Xbox 360
Tracking the Golden Fleece is (mostly) a pleasure cruise
The cultural obsession with superheroes is not a contemporary phenomenon. Thousands of years before Batman and Spider-Man saved Gotham and New York—and a few decades later, Hollywood—human beings were fascinated with superhuman do-gooders. Don’t forget: The Christian faith begins with an ordinary-seeming guy who reluctantly unveils miraculous powers in his crusade against injustice and an unfathomably sinister arch-nemesis. (Sounds like a Stan Lee creation, no?) The ancient Greeks had their own superheroes—some divine, some mortal. In a world filled with such wearying complexity, we yearn for tales in which good triumphs over a wholly unambiguous evil.
While most video-game developers have taken the film industry’s lead in
scavenging the Marvel and DC superhero universes, Codemasters shrewdly
bucks the trend by eschewing DC for B.C. The developer’s newest RPG
focuses on the exploits of Jason of the Argonauts and his epic quest
for the Golden Fleece. If you’ve heard the tale before, get ready for
some surprises. Instead of rehashing the story as it’s been handed
down, the game’s writers embrace the folk tradition by cherry-picking
several of the more famous characters and weaving a fresh take on the
adventure.
The game’s story opens the day Jason, king of Iolcus, is to wed his
lifelong sweetheart Alceme. As they begin the private ceremony, a
ghoulish assassin on a distant perch dips his arrow’s tip in some fell
magic poison and sends it whizzing into the bride’s chest. She slumps
over and dies in Jason’s arms. After Jason and his beefcake buddy
Hercules give chase through the palace, they learn that the assassin
was a member of the Blacktongues, a duplicitous race of dark sorcerers
who’d long been banished from Iolcus. Instead of giving Alceme last
rites so that she may complete her journey to the underworld, Jason
pledges to locate the Golden Fleece in order to bring her back. If he
doesn’t find it in time, he will doom his beloved’s ghost to wander the
earth for eternity.
There’s plenty to love about Rise of the Argonauts. The game’s
soundtrack offers a stylistic nod to Lisa Gerrard’s ethereal vocalizing
in Ridley Scott’s film Gladiator. The stunning visuals and sound design
offer players nothing short of blanket immersion. When you first emerge
from the tree line onto the beach and get a look at your ship—the
Argo—looming over Iolcus’s harbor, and you hear waves lapping up
against its creaking hull, you can nearly smell the salt air and heady
prospect of adventures yet to unfold. I even found myself adjusting the
camera angle to admire the craftsmanship of new weapons I’d collected.
The long, curving blade of my spear tip bore exquisite artisan
etchings. The golden lion head adorning one shoulder pad on my armor
glimmered in the afternoon sun. Most narrative-heavy games are lacking
in both solid dialogue and voice acting, but even those aspects of the
game are well-executed.
Regrettably, Argonauts stumbles in a few major areas. While the
weapons are beyond handsome, you’ll get precious little enjoyment from
wielding them. The battle system is woefully prosaic and you’ll tire of
watching Jason perform the same finishing move over and over. The
pacing is also problematic. After the exciting opening sequence
mentioned above, the game kills its momentum by forcing you to perform
a series of mind-numbing errands before you can begin your adventure in
earnest. I’m still bitter about one especially tedious hike from the
harbor up to the palace and back again just to ask Uncle Pelias a
follow-up question about my sea map to the Oracle of Delphi. Speaking
of maps, with no option for a mini one on your heads-up display—the
designers don’t want you missing Greece’s beautiful vistas while fixing
your eyes on the bottom corner of the screen—you’ll be forced to pause
the action repeatedly just to access the menu and make sure you’re
jogging in the right direction.
Even if Argonauts isn’t always smooth sailing, it’s a voyage that
will capture your imagination and leave you eager to find out what
happens next. Plus: if, like me, your parents just so happened to name
you “Jason,” your ego will sprout superhero-like wings from being
eulogized with such relentless zeal. Mere mortals need the occasional
pick-me-up.