Despite its ambitious stride to tell a gripping tale of a father/husband striving desperately to look for his missing family, Husk‘s end delivery is anything but. With a host of mechanical and structural oddities breaking numerous points of immersion where it’s seldom gained — both before and after post-release updates — across environments that, though blended rather well into one another, could very well be found in ample other titles using horror as an attribute, Husk is a frustrating game to recommend.
I heard that HUSK was a dark suspenseful indie game coming down the line in the vein of Silent Hill, and that it was one of the games to watch for in 2017. Even the name sounded intriguing… HUSK. So, one dark and stormy night when the family was off to...
En dépit de ses nombreux soucis techniques (parfois assez énervants), j'ai passé un assez bon moment sur Husk. Et si je n'ai eu « peur » que pendant les premières dizaines de minutes de jeu (j'ai pourtant facilement peur sur les jeux d'horreur), le...