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Celeste review

Celeste is a short indie platformer about a girl climbing a mountain to overcome self-doubt.

Gameplay

Celeste lacks depth. Most screens have only one way to reach the destination. Other than a skippable platform or the ability to grab an edge or land right on top, there's usually a fixed sequence of correct moves with very strict timing.

Compare this to Super Mario Bros. In Super Mario Bros, you can set your own pace throughout an entire level, *most* platforms are optional, and most threats have multiple ways you can deal with them. You can jump on enemies to eliminate them entirely, or just jump over them which is easier. Koopas can be used as weapons against other enemies and blocks. Powerups don't just refill your dash, they change the ways you can interact with the level.

In Celeste there are really only platforms - most things that looks like powerups are fundamentally just a different kind of platform. (Consider this: how much would the game actually change if you could land on green gems? It would be easier because you could stop and think, but otherwise, it'd be about the same.)

Apart from the shallowness of its mechanics, though, Celeste gets everything right about the gameplay. There are quick retries, autosaves with reasonable section length, and I never had a single death that seemed like it couldn't have been avoided without foreknowledge. You always get enough time to react to things after you see them.

There is also an "assist mode", which is an excellent implementation of an easy mode. It lets you choose various advantages like adjusting game speed or unlimited wall-climbing stamina and you can turn them off at any time. I used it to get around a bug causing one section to be impractical. Uniquely, it's not framed as a persistent setting or something you're *supposed* to do, but as an emergency tool, encouraging everyone to only use it after seeing from experience that they can't proceed without.

Difficulty settings

Story

The story was definitely more interesting to me than the game. I didn't much like the tedium of screen after screen of the same simple mechanics with sparse dialogue and no end in sight. (I was much happier with the chapter where you can see how many checkpoints you have left before the end.) I didn't do the optional challenges and I definitely wouldn't have played the game if not for the story.

The creators really care about their side characters. Everyone you think is a one-time use NPC turns out to have multiple sides and be important and interesting in their own right. While the game is about Madeline's story, it really shows that everyone else has a story too, and that's awesome. The writing is really good. I don't think there was a single line of clumsy or boring dialogue.

The artwork is really good, and the voice byte system is more sophisticated than Undertale's and allows a character's voice to change tone while still sounding like the same character.

My favorite part of the game, by far, was when Madeline and Theo spend the night around a campfire and there's loooots of dialogue. It's all so good and the characters are so likeable, and it's so cool that you get to choose what order they go through the conversations topics in, and you pick options where each one of them speaks first, so it's like you're controlling both characters! I think there's a lot of unexplored story design space based on the idea of controlling more than one character (Bad End Theater is a good example of it). I was disappointed that nothing like this ever happens again.

When I first played the game I wrote some criticisms of the story that I later decided were bad. But there's one major thing that I still think is wrong. So, the prologue establishes Madeline's potential growth arc by briefly showing her as self-doubting or mildly depressed. It's foreshadowed that the mountain has magical properties, that it makes you face your true self or something, and the main antagonist is Madeline's evil alter that people seem to call Badeline. Badeline represents Madeline being sabotaged by self-doubt.

But when Madeline defeats her in the mid-late-game climax, Badeline doesn't get vanquished or absorbed, but becomes an ally. This just doesn't work because it contradicts the idea that Badeline is not literally a separate person but a personification of a weakness. It would work if she became an ally in a way that still represented self-doubt (if she became the voice of rational caution - but then that wouldn't fit this story), but the way it happens, she just ceases to represent self-doubt.

Pet peeve: when the two argue about forgiving Mr. Oshiro, Badeline has lines of the form "he did X", perfectly setting up Madeline to say "so did you", but she doesn't.

About Madeline being trans

This was claimed by developer Maddy Thorson, but sadly it's not in the base game (the author says it wasn't even her intention at the time), only in the DLC released a year later. *I wish* Madeline had been trans. That would've been really cool and fit really well into this story. But as it was decided only after the story was complete, it's like saying Dumbledore is gay. Maddy discusses that in the article, but fails to explain why this is different.

Maddy Thorson's blog post

Of course, we underestimated how much anything less than a full, in-writing confirmation will be endlessly debated as "not enough proof," to which I ask, where’s the proof that she's cis?

Where's the proof that Dumbledore is straight? And yet, Maddy didn't like that one.

The answer is simply that most people are cis. Because of that, characters in stories are cis by default. If you want to make a trans character, there should be some indication of that in the original source material. It doesn't have to be Madeline saying "btw im trans". The clues in the farewell DLC are enough; if they were placed before the main story was complete, I wouldn't be complaining.

From Maddy's writing, I think the reason this happened is because Madeline was a self-insert to her, so much so that after Maddy realized *she* was trans, she felt Madeline had to be too.