Please enter a valid email address
Please choose a platform
:
How does your child play this? Alone, with friends, with family? How did they discover it and what kept them coming back for more?
:
To verify your input please enter your email to create an account.
Email:
Play Overview
Remember Me (2013) is an adventure game developed where you play Nilin, a memory hunter working for an underground resistance. The game is set in the year 2084, in a futuristic version of Paris called Neo-Paris, where the Memorize corporation has made memories a digital commodity. Although this is not explicitly fleshed out, the environments and world tell of a society that is without a remembered past.
You start without your memories and work to recover her lost memories. You do this by exploring, climbing and fighting. In specific Memory Remix sequences, you reconstruct the memories of the people you meet. Here you play god, in changing their perception reality. There's an easy power in this process. One you can't avoid. But one that raises interesting questions over who writes history and how we construct our view of the world.
The game may seem repetitive and overly hand-holding to more experienced players. But for beginners in these experiences, it helpfully leads you through each step of the way. It's from the same developer as Life Is Strange and offers ideas of rewinding memories that came to fruition in that smaller and more intimate story.
Our examiner, Andy Robertson, first checked Remember Me 3 years ago. It was re-examined by Jo Robertson and updated 10 weeks ago.
You start without your memories and work to recover her lost memories. You do this by exploring, climbing and fighting. In specific Memory Remix sequences, you reconstruct the memories of the people you meet. Here you play god, in changing their perception reality. There's an easy power in this process. One you can't avoid. But one that raises interesting questions over who writes history and how we construct our view of the world.
The game may seem repetitive and overly hand-holding to more experienced players. But for beginners in these experiences, it helpfully leads you through each step of the way. It's from the same developer as Life Is Strange and offers ideas of rewinding memories that came to fruition in that smaller and more intimate story.
Our examiner, Andy Robertson, first checked Remember Me 3 years ago. It was re-examined by Jo Robertson and updated 10 weeks ago.
Kids not old enough for this yet? There are lots of games similar to Remember Me. Here are some similar younger-rated games:
Benefits
This game is good if you want to:
Age Ratings
In the US, ESRB state: Players punch and kick enemies during melee combat and use a futuristic gun-like weapon called a “Spammer” against robots. Battles are accompanied by punching sounds, laser fire, slow-motion and screen-shaking effects. Some of the game's violence takes place during characters' memory “remixes,” which are presented as cutscenes that can be manipulated by changing certain elements. Memories include a character shooting a woman; a character shooting himself; a man removing a child's memories, which causes her to lose consciousness. Blood splatter effects and pools of blood sometimes appear in cutscenes; corpses are sometimes depicted in pools of blood during gameplay. Players occasionally come across posters depicting topless women or nude cabaret girls with partially exposed buttocks. Female leper-like figures are also occasionally shown topless. The words “f**k,” “sh*t,” and “a*shole” appear in the dialogue.
Costs
Remember Me usually costs £22.99.
Remember Me
There are no additional in-game purchases, loot boxes, adverts or subscription costs.Game Details
Release Date: 03/06/2013
Price: 80% off
Out Now: PC, PS3 and Xbox 360
Players: 1
Genres: Action, Adventure (Fighting and Platform)
Accessibility: 0 features documented (Tweet Developer )
Components: 3D Third-Person
Developer: DONTNOD Ent (@DONTNOD_Ent)
© 2024 Family Gaming Database