Over time, scanning feels like second nature, but all of the puzzles feel too similar. If you’re looking for a quick, eerily beautiful distraction with a unique twist on the first-person adventure genre, Scanner Sombre would be good for you. It’s unsure whether it will be implemented in the future, but this game would have been good for it. At times, it feels like VR was planned, but was ultimately not implimented. But even with this ability, the game feels fairly short.ĭespite your character wearing a virtual reality headset the entire game, Scanner Sombre does not support VR. Playing a second time allows you to uncover secrets you weren’t able to uncover the first time around, thanks to the ability to keep your upgrades. Scanner Sombre can be completed in just three hours, but it does offer a New Game+ mode. Unfortunately, there isn’t a lot of progressing to do. In a way, this is a satisfying experience to give you a sense of how far you progressed. If you look behind you, you can see your path, a trail of blue lights leading to where you are now. There are scenes where you’re scanning forward on a path and can only take in the cave around you, imagining how beautiful it must look when illuminated. While using a minimalist approach, this game has plenty of beautiful moments. You’re supposed to be wearing a VR headset, so this makes your own scanner feel extremely out of place in the world in front of you. What pulls you out of this is your own hand, as it and the LIDAR scanner are the only “real-looking” objects you encounter. Instead of being presented with your typical cave and lake sceneries, you’re almost asked to imagine what everything looks like. Often, I would search for a dark path and go that way, knowing I must not have been there if it hasn’t been scanned yet.ĭespite movement flaws, having the entire game represented by these beams of light is an interesting design choice. It felt like moving forward was the only puzzle this game had to offer.ĭue to all of your surroundings being represented by beams of light, it’s difficult to get a feel for where you are in a room except for looking at specific shapes of things.
But even with these helpful upgrades, I still found myself frequently confused on how to progress. Thankfully, the game does provide you with upgrades as you progress, including a map, the option to adjust the aperture of your laser (faster and narrow scanning, or slower, but wider scanning?) and a blast option to scan a large field of objects quickly (this was the most useful tool, even if it took a little while to recharge). This causes you to move forward on its linear path quicker, hoping for a faster way to scan surrounding objects. The common fear of being alone becomes the fear of not being alone. You’ll occasionally hear sounds from the cave that sound less natural or more dangerous. When Scanner Sombre isn’t giving you a melancholic and isolated feeling, it’s giving off an unsettling vibe. Of course, I knew I had to get across the bridge somehow, so I jumped over the gap… and to my doom with an unsettling bone crunching sound. You figure out that there are planks missing by completely scanning the bridge and inferring that if something didn’t scan, it doesn’t exist. Near the beginning, there is a segment of several bridges overlapping each other with planks missing. The caves are silent, save for the occasional drips and echoes, and your biggest obstacle is falling to your death. The tone of the game is definitely somber, as its title suggests. As you’re traversing the caves, your character will occasionally give you bits of the narrative that adds to the mystery. You walk ahead, scan and figure out where not to step based on what doesn’t appear. That’s almost all there is to the gameplay. The gameplay concept is simple, if the object is red, it’s close to you, if it’s blue, it’s far away. As you scan the area, walls and objects light up to show you how close you are to that object.
Scanner Sombre, developed by Introversion Software (the masters behind Prison Architect), is a first person exploration game where you use a LIDAR scanner to survey and navigate caves. And you’re finally able to traverse the mysterious caves around you. With these equipped, your world has become much more… colorful. Nearby, you spot a VR Headset and a LIDAR scanner.