
Ranging from freezing enemies, shocking them, and creating barriers to spraying enemies in a coating to light them on fire, there is a lot to explore in terms of your own combat preferences. As Major P-3, you have CHAR-les, a glove, and a polymer implant that you can upgrade to use different elemental powers. Starting with the good, Atomic Heart’s crafting, skills, and weapon systems may be something we’ve seen before, but it’s well-explained and executed. You must follow Sechenov’s plan and restore the network and do it while uncovering well-hidden secrets along the way. A soldier with next to no memories, you fight your way through the robots (and for some reason, mutant zombies) to uncover the truth while also being a pawn in the system itself. In an attempt to cover up the incident and move forward with other development plans, the player is dispatched as Major P-3.


The pinnacle of science, which is captured on posters and exhibits throughout the game for you to read, Dmitry Sechenov has created a substance known as “Polymer” which bridges biology and robotics all to feed the “Kollectiv,” a neural network planned to launch through a new implant that directly connects to humans’ brains.īut when sabotage turns the robots into murderous machines, turning on every human in their view, the “Kollectiv” is in danger. With polymers changing how people live and robotic advancements pushing life forward in the 1950s, the USSR is a place of wealth and ease.

Developed by Mundfish, Atomic Heart is an action RPG set in a dystopian alternate post-WWII world where the Soviet Union is at the center of a technological revolution.
