Article 6SCY7 Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl review – transfixing Ukrainian dystopia built on underlying tragedy

Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl review – transfixing Ukrainian dystopia built on underlying tragedy

by
Keith Stuart
from Technology | The Guardian on (#6SCY7)

GSC Game World; PC, Xbox
Explore the starkly beautiful landscapes of the irradiated Zone in this foreboding and remorselessly challenging survival adventure

When Ukrainian developer GSC Game World released the apocalyptic adventure Stalker in 2007, it was considered a bleakly improbable piece of speculative fiction. Heavily inspired by cult novel Roadside Picnic, it imagined an alternative timeline in which a scientific experiment in 2006 caused a second Chornobyl disaster and a vast irradiated zone filled with powerful space-time anomalies, in which the only inhabitants were mutants and the titular stalkers: men who wandered the wastelands looking for valuable artefacts.

The sequel, however, arrives in a very different world, its lengthy development period having been affected by both the Covid pandemic and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Now the Stalker vision is a lot less improbable and its speculation has a much greater sense of urgency and authenticity.

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