Connect with us

Tech

Slitterhead review:

Published

on

Slitterhead review:

Like the brains of Kowlong’s teeming masses, Slitterhead’s complex mythology is a lot to wrap one’s jaws around. You play as a disembodied spirit in Bokeh Game Studio’s maiden voyage, a being from Japanese mythology known as a Hyoki, whose ability to possess and control everyday humans bestows each host with supernatural powers. Using them to fight back against the Slitterhead invasion is a necessary evil, one the Hyoki initially fails to see as such. After all, it views humans as plentiful and thereby expendable in the densely-populated city of Kowlong. But when it fuses with Julee, its first companion of many, everything changes. She affectionately names it Night Owl, one of two Hyoki from the original folklore. As soon she does, a curious thing starts blossoming in this non corporeal being: empathy.

FAST FACTS

(Image credit: Bokeh Game Studio)

Release date: November 8, 2024
Platform(s): PS5, PS4 Xbox Series X, PC
Developer: In-house
Publisher: Bokeh Game Studio

The duality of humanity and monstrosity is a core theme sitting at the beating heart of Slitterhead. Make no mistake, this is a grisly horror game where skulls split open to make room for spiny appendages, shrivelled bodies hanging limp as empty cocoons upon the backs of the insectoid creatures that burst from them, mouthed tongues flickering from jagged maws in search of unsuspecting human eye sockets to pierce and suck dry of cerebral matter. It’s a grisly reimagining of zombie fiction, this time with razor-sharp third-person combat encounters where chaining possession is the key to success as you literally throw bodies at the problem. But Slitterhead also makes a poignant comment on the human condition, taking inspiration from the very real, very overcrowded region of Kowloon, Hong Kong to show how even an everyday person has a purpose in the grand scheme of life – and, in this case, death.

Welcome to the dark side

Slitterhead screenshot of Rarity Doni fighting a mantis Slitterhead

(Image credit: Bokeh Game Studio)

Peeling back the layers of Slitterhead’s bizarre narrative is a process in itself. It starts off slowly, our first host a barking street dog that leads us into the bustling main road of central Kowlong. From here, the nameless spirit leaps from person to person, grappling with memory loss as it tries in vain to recall who and what it is. It only knows one purpose: destroy the Slitterheads, vicious monsters posturing as humans who hunt their prey in the shadows of Kowlong’s insidious underbelly. Think triads, prostitution rings, creepy cult hideouts – the works.

Continue Reading