


But even if you find a way, the sensor that you rely on may break down, or you may run out of lures, even your drone’s camera feed can start to fail. But dangerous creatures lurk in these derelict ships, and weapons are rare, so you may need to think of a clever way to explore a military outpost using only a motion sensor and a lure. You have to earn everything in Duskers, scavenging drone upgrades, drones, and even ship upgrades. And when you issue commands, you do it through a command line interface. Motion sensors tell you something’s out there, but not what. What you see is how each drone sees the world. What you hear comes through a remote microphone. You are a drone operator, surrounded by old gritty tech that acts as your only eyes and ears to the outside world. It should also be stated that the game is in an early access state with new content being released occasionally.In Duskers you pilot drones into derelict spaceships to find the means to survive and piece together how the universe became a giant graveyard. Those who didn't play the inspiration materials may find the difficulty and graphical style confusing and irritating. Most of the fun is directly related to nostalgia. That isn't to say that this a game suitable for a general audience, however. Creature design is fantastic and suitably creepy, an endless horde survival mode adds some life, and multiplayer is appreciated. While the overall appearance, sound design and combat style are lifted straight from the genre's glory days, DUSK does contain some innovations. Players embark on self-contained campaigns (known as episodes), finding weapons and blasting away anything that moves, or challenge friends in online arena battles. Taking inspiration from classic mid-90's FPS titles like Quake, DUSK is an unapologetic love letter to giant bunny hops and ridiculous guns. Fight through hordes of enemies with action straight out of the 90's.
