![]() I’m by no means the most educated PC gamer in the world, but I am confident the development team have delivered a solid port here. Framerate was consistently around the 60fps mark and I didn’t experience a single technical error on this new Steam version of the game throughout my entire playthrough. The graphics are incredible but that slightly cartoony style means it’ll look good on almost any setting in my opinion. The game ran smoothly on high settings in 1440p for me, running a humble 2070 Super. How does Kena: Bridge of Spirits run on PC? But it’s cracking those little environmental puzzles and clearing swathes of darkness away that makes it really satisfying. The enemies are decently varied, requiring quick adaptations of tactics to overcome, just as puzzling as Kena‘s environments. It’s not that the combat isn’t enjoyable, because it certainly has a nice flow to it. Just when you think you’ve cracked it, it throws another element in the mix, and all of a sudden you’re thinking of all those other obstacles you’ve passed back in the village that you could get past now. All of the player’s tools are used together in layering, unexpected ways to forge a path ahead. The game’s first big ‘proper’ boss battle was easier than basically all of the mini-bosses I faced on the run up to it, which obviously felt a little underwhelming.Īs I mentioned earlier, Kena‘s real strength lies in exploration. The game does cutscenes and emotion much more effectively than battles, which are beautifully scored and presented but often anti-climactic. The lost spirits are tied inexorably to the corruption ravaging the land, coming to a head with big boss battles and emotional cutscenes. There’s a lost spirit that needs some guiding, and Kena needs to acquire three relics for them to see their memories and lay them to rest. We’re essentially walked through a series of short stories that follow an identical gameplay loop. It’s these little moments of curiosity being rewarded that make the game so charming, while the overarching story leaves a little to be desired. You’ll use The Rot in combination with Kena’s combat abilities to access previously unreachable areas, score an extra Rot or two, or boost your health pool whilst looking out on gorgeous vistas. Kena is arguably more focused on exploration than combat, which is competent enough but neither as engaging or satisfying as the exploration and environmental puzzle solving. The Rot can be ordered to move objects, swarm enemies, and even transformed into their true spirit form to wreak massive damage. This is where those Pikmin elements come into play. They play an important part in the story – as they allow Kena to cleanse corruption – but they also make up the other big part of her exploration/combat toolkit. They can be found out in the wild like collectibles, or picked up in big chunks after certain story beats. Individually they can’t do much, but the more Kena gathers, the stronger they become. The Rot are forest spirits personified as cute little furry blobs. At first it’s just simple melee combat (complete with an overpowered parry ability) but she quickly earns a magical bow, spirit bombs capable of levitating rubble in the air, and, of course, the Rot. ![]() Kena gets quite the arsenal of tools throughout her journey. ![]() Kena’s gameplay is a mix of combat, puzzle solving and exploration, regularly slamming you up against boss fights that require specific and precise tactics to overcome, with score of extra challenges. This doesn’t look like a game that comes in at just over £30. Watching the forests burst back into life when you remove corruption is always satisfying, even after a few hours of working your way through it. Kena’s task is to cleanse the land of corrupting energies using these crystals and friendly forest spirits (who we’ll get to later). Kena‘s art direction is almost flawless, blending Southeast Asian themes with what I can only describe as Atlantis: The Lost Empire inspired crystal structures. It plays a little like a stripped down Legend of Zelda mainline game with a hearty splash of Pikmin for flavour. It looks like a Pixar movie come to life. We’ve had the opportunity to review it now the game has made that journey, and man – what an interesting little curiosity this game is. Kena: Bridge of Spirits was formerly a Playstation exclusive, one that’s now made its way to PC.
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