Anomaly Agent Review: Blend of parkour & fast action
In Anomaly Agent, you play as Agent 70, a red-haired and definitely sarcastic character. As a member of Tday, an organisation dedicated to maintaining the natural order, Agent 70 seeks to stop so-called Anomalies, which disrupt the world’s equilibrium and cause significant turmoil. When a last-minute assignment delays his promotion, Agent 70 is tasked with tracking down an organised gang of anomalies, which might be his most difficult and deadly operation yet.
Phew Phew Games is the developer and publisher of Anomaly Agent. Gamers may also play on the Nintendo Switch, Xbox Series X and S, and Xbox One. The game blends action with platforming to create a quick and tough side-scroller.
As anomalies are handled with, there are long-term consequences, such as when your captain expands or contracts as the universe’s equilibrium alters. Agent 70 goes via portals to locations infiltrated by hostile clones and dangerous anomalies, requiring smooth skills and fast thinking.
Saying good things earns you positive points, which can lead to health boosts, whilst saying the incorrect thing earns you negative points, which can lead to more cash to purchase improvements. It’s not difficult to determine which response does what, so simply answer to fit into whatever plan you’re pursuing.
Anomaly Agent features three difficulty settings to choose from: easy, normal, and hard. You may modify the level of difficulty at any time by going to the menu options. You may enable the Enemy Attack Warning, which displays an exclamation point over the enemy’s head when they are going to attack you.
When you beat an enemy, they may drop weaponry that you may use against other adversaries, as well as health packs that restore your life metre in the upper left corner of the screen. A checkpoint is created whenever you clear one screen and go on to the next. So, even if you are defeated, you will restart at the beginning of that screen. Depending on the difficulty level you chose, advancing to this next place will fully refill your health, allowing you to face all of the adversaries at the following location.
Platforming feeds into battle, which leads to another type of platforming sequence. You may transition from parkour to melee to an area where distance is required to succeed, and then directly into a mini-boss or boss fight. The lack of a defined formula for the adventure allows the gameplay variation to feel natural, and even elements that stand out, such as pseudo-stealth passages interwoven into the story, succeed due of the sheer variety in play — nothing feels out of place here. The sensitive controls also provide for a fluid feel in battle and platforming.
The side-scrolling format is fairly traditional, yet the game often finds ways to construct levels that incorporate minor but significant changes. Each level is short enough that failing is rarely frustrating. Boss bouts are highlights, requiring players to employ their whole arsenal of skills to identify and exploit flaws. Expect to perish several times until the pattern you need to counter becomes apparent.
Anomaly Agent delivers a really fascinating, wacky, and otherworldly plot without a lot of explanation or lengthy cutscenes. There are even occasions where Agent 70 is given the ability to affect events as they develop, providing gamers with different endings and justifying several playthroughs. Anyone looking for fast-paced thrills should check out Anomaly Agent.