Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 review

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is Sandfall Interactive's debut, which tells me two things about the French studio. Firstly, that they're a bunch of utter show offs and, secondly, that they're a bunch of utter show offs. You can't do this, Sandfall. You can't just come storming out the gate with a turn-based RPG possessed of all the flash and experimentation of Lost Odyssey or Legend Of Dragoon plus all the haunting playfulness and bizarre beauty of both Miyazakis having a thumb war while Yoko Taro rolls around on the floor beside them. I don't know how they do things in France, but where I'm from, pulling off such clarity of vision on your first attempt is illegal - as is this much earnest outpouring of feeling on any attempt. Indeed, I can see some of you finding Clair Obscur a little too cute, a little too eager to dazzle and move with its operatic spectacle and Lisa Simpson-ish virtuosity. Me? I find it hard to even get lost in games I love these days. I'll usually settle for anything that stops me checking my email for an hour. But if Clair Obscur's brilliant combat had me hooked, the journey it offers had me enchanted. It would appear that they really do make 'em like this anymore. Read more

Apr 23, 2025 - 10:07
 0
Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 review

Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 is Sandfall Interactive's debut, which tells me two things about the French studio. Firstly, that they're a bunch of utter show offs and, secondly, that they're a bunch of utter show offs. You can't do this, Sandfall. You can't just come storming out the gate with a turn-based RPG possessed of all the flash and experimentation of Lost Odyssey or Legend Of Dragoon plus all the haunting playfulness and bizarre beauty of both Miyazakis having a thumb war while Yoko Taro rolls around on the floor beside them.

I don't know how they do things in France, but where I'm from, pulling off such clarity of vision on your first attempt is illegal - as is this much earnest outpouring of feeling on any attempt. Indeed, I can see some of you finding Clair Obscur a little too cute, a little too eager to dazzle and move with its operatic spectacle and Lisa Simpson-ish virtuosity.

Me? I find it hard to even get lost in games I love these days. I'll usually settle for anything that stops me checking my email for an hour. But if Clair Obscur's brilliant combat had me hooked, the journey it offers had me enchanted. It would appear that they really do make 'em like this anymore.

Read more