Let s take another look at Hades, the rogue-ish-action-hack-n-slash-n-chat-em-up by Supergiant Games, developers of Bastion and Transistor, in which you play Zagreus, the immortal son of the lord of the underworld on a quest to repeatedly run away from home. Home, in this case, is a giant-ass castle in helltown where the tortured souls of the deceased languish while they await processing, like an infernal waiting room or a less depressing version of Digbeth Coach Station. Yeah, that s right Birmingham, your dumb coach station is whatever the building equivalent of abject misery is. The toilets cost 30p and they don t give change. I once saw a rat eating a pigeon there.
Good news, Epic Store renouncers. You can now play Supergiant’s latest game without getting your fingers dirty, as Hades has landed on Steam and is no longer exclusive to Epic. The Hellenic action roguelike is still in early access, but it’s also still really good. It’s plenty polished, with swords that wallop and dodges that delight. I’ve played for dozens of hours already, and haven’t yet checked out all the new stuff in last week’s big update.