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Dead Cells
Developer(s)
Publisher(s)
Director(s)
  • Brad Fay Jr.
  • Barbara Johanhoff
Producer(s)
  • Donovan Westerson
  • John Crow
Designer(s)Sébastien Bénard
Composer(s)
  • Yoann Laulan
  • Thomas Chastagnol
Platform(s)
Release
  • Windows,Linux,macOS,Nintendo Switch,PS4,Xbox One
  • August 7, 2018
  • iOS
  • August 28, 2019
  • Android
  • June 3, 2020
  • PlayStation 5
  • June 29, 2023
Genre(s)Roguelike,Metroidvania
Mode(s)Single-player

Dead Cellsis a 2018roguelike-Metroidvaniagame developed byMotion TwinandEvil Empire,and published by Motion Twin. The player takes the role of an amorphous creature called the Prisoner. As the Prisoner, the player must fight their way out of a diseased island in order to slay the island's King. The player gains weapons, treasure and other tools through exploration of the procedurally-generated levels.Dead Cellsfeatures apermadeathsystem, causing the player to lose all items and other abilities upon dying. A currency called Cells can be collected from defeated enemies, allowing the player to purchase permanent upgrades.

Production ofDead Cellsbegan after Motion Twin planned development for a follow-up to their previous browser gameDie2Nite.The developers decided to replace thecooperative gameplayofDie2Nitewith asingle-playerexperience focused around combat and action. They took inspiration from the Engineercharacter classfromTeam Fortress 2,and remadeDead Cellsinto an actionplatform gamewhere the player would utilize a variety of combinations of weapons and skills.

The game was released forLinux,macOS,Nintendo Switch,PlayStation 4,Windows,andXbox Oneon August 7, 2018. A mobile port foriOSwas released on August 28, 2019, and anAndroidport was released in 2020. A version forPlayStation 5was added on June 29, 2023. After release, Motion Twin supported the game with several updates andexpansions.The game received positive reviews from critics, who praised its combat style and level design, with specific praise being directed towards the randomized levels and weapons. By March 2021, the game had sold 5 million copies.

Gameplay[edit]

AGIFof the Prisoner using the jump and dodge mechanics to get behind a charging enemy.

Dead Cellsis a2D side-scrolling"roguevania", a combination of theroguelikeandMetroidvaniagenres.[2][3]The player controls the Prisoner, an amorphous creature who journeys across an island full of mutated monsters.[4]When the player dies, they lose all weapons and upgrades obtained in a playthrough, excluding a few permanent items.[5][6]Weapons primarily include swords, bows, shields, and placeabletrapsthat harm enemies that come near them. In combat, the Prisoner can dodge across the ground to avoid the attacks of enemies, or jump over the attacks. Dodging into an enemy's space allows the Prisoner to move through them and attack from behind.[7]When falling from a height, the Prisoner can slam into the ground, allowing them to stun enemies, or allow the Prisoner to fall from heights without getting stunned themselves.[8][9]

The game's combat is comparable to theDark Soulsseries, with difficult enemies possessing certain behaviors the player can learn, and where frequent player-character death is a fundamental part of the game.[10]As they explore a series oflevelsand fight the creatures within, the player can collect an in-game currency called Cells from defeated foes. Cells can be used to purchase permanent upgrades, such as potions that restorehit pointsor additional weapons that may be randomly obtained during a playthrough.[6][10]These Cells can only be spent at the end of a dungeon section; if the player dies before then, they lose all collected Cells.[11]New upgrade options can be found by locating blueprints inside dungeons, which must be taken out of the level to be collected.[12]

Levels are procedurally generated by the merging of predesigned sections in a random configuration, creating dungeons with many different placements of enemies and items.[10]Between dungeons, the player can obtain a limited number of mutations, benefits which grant unique bonuses to the Prisoner's capabilities that last until they die.[8]The player can reforge weapons during this time, giving the reforged weapons new effects during combat.[9]Inside the dungeons, the player can find hidden Power Scrolls, which increase the Prisoner's hit points and increase the damage of weapons depending upon the tool's classification of Brutality, Tactics, or Survival.[5][7]The player can also find multiple permanent upgrades called Runes, which allow for new methods of travel in the game's levels. Runes can be obtained by defeating powerful Elite enemies, which are located inside the game's levels.[9]Each upgrade requires the previous Rune in order to obtain the next one.[8]

Plot[edit]

Premise[edit]

Taking place on an unnamed island, the player character is the Prisoner, an amorphous creature capable of possessing dead bodies located in the depths of the island. While the "head" of the Prisoner is immortal, the bodies it possesses are not, and "dying" will force the Prisoner to return back to the Prisoners' Quarters to find another corpse. The Prisoner itself does not speak, limiting its interactions withnon-player characters(NPCs) to gestures and body language alone. The player is occasionally shown the thoughts of the Prisoner through dialogue boxes.

Story[edit]

The Prisoner awakens in the depths of the island's prison, suffering fromamnesia.A soldier encounters the Prisoner, and mentions that they can no longer die. The Prisoner tries to escape the prison, but their head is forced back to the depths as soon as its body is destroyed. Between subsequent escape attempts, the Prisoner learns that the island was once a mighty kingdom that fell when a plague known as "The Malaise" transformed most of the kingdom's citizens into mutated monsters.

After escaping the Prisoners' Quarters, the Prisoner decides to kill the island's reclusive King, believing that his death will cause something on the island to "change". While leaving the Quarters, the Prisoner meets with the Collector, a hooded figure that trades Cells in exchange for items and weaponry. After fighting through the island's Malaise-infected locales, the Prisoner reaches the King's throne room and succeeds in slaying the comatose monarch. However, the King's corpse violently explodes in the process, destroying the Prisoner's host body. The Prisoners' head crawls out from the burning fragments of the destroyed throne, where it exits the throne room through a fountain's drain. The drain leads back to the Prisoners' Quarters, where the resurrected Prisoner ponders the consequences of the King's death.

Rise of the Giant[edit]

TheRise of the Giantdownloadable content expands the plot ofDead Cells,providing the game with alternative endings. The Prisoner gains access to a new area of the island, the Cavern, which houses a titanic undead Giant. Upon his defeat, the Giant reveals that the Prisoner is actually the King himself, and blames him for the destruction of the kingdom. After defeating thefinal Boss,the Prisoner can collect Boss Cells, in-game modifiers that are used to increase the difficulty of the game. If the player collects all five Boss Cells and reaches the throne room, they are able to gain access to an additional level called the Astrolab. At the top of the Astrolab, the Prisoner meets the Collector; he tells the Prisoner that he has been trading for Cells in order to create thePanacea,the ultimate cure for the Malaise. Upon producing the Panacea and drinking it, the Collector goes mad and attacks the Prisoner. The Prisoner manages to ingest some of the Panacea before the Collector's defeat, which causes their host body to disappear. Disappointed with the Panacea, the head returns to the Quarters to possess another corpse.

When the Prisoner reaches the throne room again, they discover that the King's body has reappeared undamaged. The head of the Prisoner abandons its host body and attaches to the King's, restoring the Prisoner's memories and allowing him to speak. However, the King's body is infected with the Malaise, and he continues to the Astrolab to face the Collector. This time, upon the Collector's defeat, the Panacea cures the King and "binds his body and soul". The King returns to his throne, where he is confronted by alook-alikeof the Prisoner intent on slaying him. The King and the look-alike battle each other in a duel.

The Queen and the Sea[edit]

The Queen and the Seadownloadable content adds three additional levels to the game, as well as an alternative ending. The Prisoner finds a letter inviting them to a meeting in the sewers beneath the prison. When the Prisoner arrives, they meet an aquatic creature called the Fisherman, who offers them a way to escape the island through the kingdom's lighthouse. After the Prisoner finds the Lighthouse Key and meets the Fisherman again at the King's castle, the latter uses his boat to take the Prisoner to the lighthouse. Inside, the Prisoner accidentally knocks over a flamingchandelier,alerting three hostile warriors named Calliope, Euterpe, and Kleio, who are the servants of the island’s Queen. The three chase the Prisoner to the top of the now-burning lighthouse, where the Prisoner defeats them in combat. The Prisoner enters the upper chambers of the lighthouse to light its beacon, but the Queen reveals herself and challenges them to a duel. The Prisoner defeats the Queen before throwing her off the lighthouse's balcony, causing an explosion that activates the structure's beacon. The Prisoner uses the beacon to attract a ship passing by the island.

Development[edit]

Dead Cells'developerMotion Twinhad been developing games for thebrowserandmobile gamingmarket since 2001. The studio found that competition in the mobile market required more investment to make profitable games, and decided to switch focus to develop what they considered their "passion project", a game that was "something hardcore, ultra-niche, with pixel art and ridiculous difficulty" that they thought would be a potential risk for gaining player interest.[13]

Initially, Motion Twin had set out to make a follow-up to their browser gameDie2Nite,[14]which was a cooperativetower defensegame for up to forty players released in 2008; for most of the game, players would work together to form defenses around a town, and then during the game's night phase, wait to see if the town survived waves of attacks by zombies. Motion Twin wanted to have improve the sequel by allowing players to take actions and fight during the night phase, while implementingfree to playmechanics. While this version worked well with large number of players, Motion Twin found it was not very exciting for single players. In 2014, they stripped down the game to a single-player experience between preparation and combat, and took it to an event called the Big Indie Pitch, where the idea came in second place in a contest. Motion Twin decided to remove the preparation phase and focus the game around constant action. The process of figuring out how to keep and work with combat elements took a year up through the end of 2015.[15]

To tighten the gameplay, Motion Twin took inspiration of the Engineercharacter classfromTeam Fortress 2,where the use of turrets and other buildable items helps to strengthen the character's abilities, and remadeDead Cellsinto an actionplatform gamewhere the player used weapons along with a variety of skills. They did not want players to get used to having a single weapon/skill combination that they used indefinitely, and arranged the roguelike elements to require the player to try out new combinations of weapons and skills as they progressed. Motion Twin's producer Steve Filby citedThe Binding of Isaacas a significant influence, highlighting its item-driven gameplay. To give the player enough options, the developers crafted about 50 different weapons, using an iterative process in gameplay, graphics, and art to ensure each of these weapons exhibited unique animations or behavior.[16]

Motion Twin opted to useSteam'searly accessapproach to both gauge player interest and to obtain feedback on game features.[13]The team feared the stigma aroundindie gamesat the time, fueled by industry speculation of an "indiepocalypse" where too many indie games would cause a collapse of the video game market around 2015, an event which never occurred.[17]Motion Twin did not want to release too early within early access, and made sure the first version available, while about 30 to 40% complete, had tight combat and gameplay controls that players would appreciate.[15]This allowed the team to address balance issues, as the developers did not want to punish players for a specific style of play, and used feedback to address this.[17]Motion Twin planned for the game to spend about a year in early access before its full release, during which time the content was created and incorporated after player feedback on both bug reports and feature suggestions.[15]Lead designer Sébastien Bénard estimated that 40 to 50% of the features in the final game were drawn from feedback during early access.[18]

The plot ofDead Cellswas not intended from the beginning. Motion Twin felt that the addition of a story would take away from the action, and wanted to include the most basic narrative possible. As the game progressed through early access, the developers decided to include a minor story after players found their world compelling. Over time, the plot was compiled into a half-French half-English document, and became more and more complex. Although the levels have a number of hints towards the story, Motion Twin withheld some of the details and utilized the nonlinear gameplay to keep the narrative vague, hoping players would piece together the story for themselves.[19]

Release and expansions[edit]

Release timeline
2017Early access
2018Dead Cells
2019Rise of the Giant
2020The Bad Seed
2021Fatal Falls
2022The Queen and the Sea
2023Return to Castlevania

The early access period was launched on May 10, 2017, with support forWindows.Additional support was added formacOSandLinuxon June 26, 2018.[20]In November 2017, the game was released onGOGas part of their drive to provide an alternate way to purchase games that are in development.[21]In January 2018, Motion Twin announced their plans on console development for theNintendo Switch,PlayStation 4,andXbox One,with a release predicted in August 2018 to correspond with the Windows' version leaving early access.[22][23]Motion Twin does not anticipate creating a sequel, and instead focused on adding a robustmodding systemfor the PC versions to allow players to expand the game following release.[18]Dead Cellswas released on August 7, 2018, for Windows, Xbox One, PlayStation 4, and Nintendo Switch.[24]Retail editions were released in August 2018.[24][25]The base game includedTwitchintegration at launch, allowing viewers, via the stream's chat, to influence the game, such as voting for which Power Scroll weapon class option the player should take.[26]

Motion Twin released a freedownloadable contentupdate to the game calledDead Cells: Rise of the Giantin mid-2019.[27]The developers announced plans to portDead Cellsto mobile devices runningiOSandAndroid,modifying the game's interface to support touch controls as well as remote controllers. The iOS version was released on August 28, 2019, and the Android version was released on June 3, 2020.[28][29][30]The game's first paid expansion,Dead Cells: The Bad Seed,was released on February 11, 2020, adding two new biomes, as well as a Boss for early game content. The new content included weapons, enemies and game mechanics.[31]On the same day, a new physicalspecial editionof the game, thePrisoner's Edition,was announced for PlayStation 4 and Nintendo Switch, which in addition to the game and DLC, includes the soundtrack, an art book, and a figurine of the player-character.[32]A second paid DLC expansion,Dead Cells: Fatal Falls,was released on January 26, 2021, which added new levels, weapons, and a Boss.[33]

Around January 2019, Motion Twin started work on their next title while still developingDead Cells.When they expanded by hiring more developers, Motion Twin wanted to keep theDead Cellsdevelopment team to between eight and ten people in order to stay a manageableworker cooperative.The team thenspun-offa new studio called Evil Empire to help co-develop the game.[34]Motion Twin released a free update on September 16, 2021, titled "Practice Makes Perfect" which added a training room, world map and many other quality of life changes.[35]A freeEveryone Is Hereupdate released on November 22, 2021, which introduced character skins and mechanics based on characters from other indie games as "guest characters". These games includedHyper Light Drifter,Guacamelee!,Curse of the Dead Gods,Blasphemous,Skul: The Hero Slayer,andHollow Knight.[36][37]Celebrating the 20th anniversary of Motion Twin, the developers revealed the third paid expansion titledDead Cells: The Queen and the Sea,which released on January 7, 2022.[38]Another free content update,Break the Bank,released in March 2022. The update added a new level that can be randomly encountered while playing, which grants the player an opportunity to earn significant sums of gold.[39]On October 26, 2022, Motion Twin released a freeBoss rushupdate, which allows the Prisoner to fight the Boss es of the game one after another in a newgame mode.[40]A freeEveryone is Here Vol. 2update in November 2022 added more homages to other indie games, includingTerraria,Hotline Miami,Slay the Spire,Shovel Knight,Risk of Rain,andKatana Zero.[41][42]

A fourth and final paid expansion,Dead Cells: Return to Castlevania,was released on March 6, 2023. It features characters, weapons, and enemies from theCastlevaniaseries, under license fromKonami.[43]This expansion includes a secret level inspired byCastlevania: Symphony of the Nightand allows the player to play as Richter Belmont with a move set more akin to theCastlevaniaseries.[44]A port forPlayStation 5was released on June 29, 2023.[45]With the game's 35th patch due in 2024, Motion Twin and Evil Empire announced that they had stopped further creative work onDead Cells,with Motion Twin transferring their development towards their next game,Windblown,and Evil Empire starting work on their own new title. They stated they will continue to support improving quality of life and bugs withinDead Cells.[46]

Reception[edit]

Dead Cellsreceived positive reviews from critics. The Xbox One version received "universal acclaim", and the PlayStation 4, PC, Nintendo Switch, and iOS versions received "generally favorable" reviews according toreview aggregatorwebsiteMetacritic.Brandin Tyrrel ofIGNpraised the game for its engaging gameplay premise, and randomized layout declaring "The placement and order of its levels areDead Cells'skeletal frame, but the ever-changing layouts and enemy and item placements are the blood that pumps through its heart. "[4]The action and combat ofDead Cellsreceived acclaim as "distinct", "fluid", and "agile".[66][5][67]Reviewers compared the game to theDark Souls,Diablo,andCastlevaniaseries due to its difficulty and constantly changing levels, while giving specific praise to the visuals and sound design.[68][69][70]

The plot ofDead Cellswas criticized, with critics calling it lacking and vague.[71][72][73]Kirk Hamilton ofKotakufound the story disappointing, stating "Aside from some sparseworldbuilding,the only story here is the story of moving forward, killing things, and gradually getting better at it ". Some commentators considered progression beyond the first few hours as" nebulous ", and the game's difficulty" callous ".[74][73]Chris Carter ofDestructoidnoted the game's difficulty, stating "There's those moments where you have a perfect run with all of the items you prefer. Then you get to a Boss you've never seen before and bam – he smashes you to a pulp."[69]

Other critics drew attention to the permadeath feature as a rewarding system, as it provided the player with permanent upgrades, the opportunity to experience all of the game's content, and gain full knowledge of its systems.[67][74][75]Neal Ronaghan ofNintendo World Reportenjoyed the permadeath feature, saying "Every run is engrossing and fun and when I die, the only thought rushing through my brain is to start over and try again, pushing as far past my previous run as I can."[76]

Sales[edit]

About a year from its early access release,Dead Cellssold over 730,000 units,[77]and exceeded 850,000 units just prior to its full release.[18]By May 2019, within ten months of its full release,Dead Cellshad accumulated sales of two million units.[78]In March 2021,Dead Cellshad sold 5 million copies during the announcement of their third DLC.[79]

Awards and accolades[edit]

Year Award Category Result Ref
2017 2017 Ping Awards Best Indie Game Nominated [80]
IGNBest of 2017 Best Action Game Nominated [81]
2018 2018 Golden Joystick Awards Best Indie Game Won [82]
Best Visual Design Nominated [83]
Ultimate Game of the Year Nominated [84]
The Game Awards 2018 Best Action Game Won [85]
Best Independent Game Nominated [86]
Gamers' Choice Awards Fan Favorite Indie Game Nominated [87]
Australian Games Awards Independent Game of the Year Nominated [88]
New York Game Awards Best Indie Game Won [89][90]
National Academy of Video Game Trade Reviewers Awards Control Design, 2D or Limited 3D. Won [91]
15th British Academy Games Awards Original Property Nominated [92]
2019 SXSW Gaming Awards Excellence In Gameplay Nominated [93]
Most Promising New Intellectual Property Nominated
Italian Video Game Awards Best Indie Game Nominated [94]
2020 Pégases Awards Best Mobile Game Won [95][96]
Best Game-as-a-Service Won

Legacy[edit]

In June 2023, developer Motion Twin announced that an animated series of the same name was in the works by French animation studio Bobbypills, the studio that has made its animated trailers, and is set for release on June 19th, 2024.[97]

Notes[edit]

  1. ^iOS and Android

References[edit]

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External links[edit]