
The most memorable of which is its awful vehicle handling. However, despite how impressive Bright Memory’s gameplay and graphics are, there are a few other faults with the game. Unlike the environments, each enemy type looked and behaved differently from the last and helped maintain the game’s engagement. I’d also like to praise the creativity and unique designs of the enemy models. While the environments get a bit stale as you progress through the game due to the number of reused models, it is worth highlighting their remarkable level of detail regardless. The reflections are sharp, the visuals are incredibly crisp, and the models are extremely detailed. While I played the game on a less than optimal RTX 3060 PC, the Ray Tracing capable GPU did its job presenting the best version of the game. In close second is the astounding graphics.

Overall, the gameplay in Bright Memory is by far its best element. These upgrades include jump attacks, charged attacks, running attacks, and air attacks that double as ranged attacks. The (few) skills and upgrades available to players are also worth the time used to unlock them.


The melee attacks aren’t just for show either, as they do just as much damage or more to your enemies, especially after upgrading them. Whatsmore, using your Light Sword to slice, dice, and pierce your enemies from afar or up close always feels satisfying. Sliding, wall running, and jump boosts all feel incredible and useful. Mobility in Bright Memory is highly satisfying. There are no lousy weapons as each has its own purpose, and for the first time in a long time, I found myself using all tools at my disposal in a game. Each gun looks fantastic and has weighty feedback.
#Bright memory infinite gameplay series
As a hybrid fps, Bright Memory sports incredible gunplay that goes toe to toe with a game series like COD and Apex. However, Bright Memory makes it clear to players from the get-go that it doesn’t care much about its narrative as the gameplay and graphics do most of the heavy lifting. The game’s conclusion is also jarringly instant and incredibly unsatisfying. The lead also has no personality, or rather, being the protagonist is her entire personality.

The story is lackluster and incoherent, the bosses often come out of nowhere, and the justification for the ancient armored soldiers appearing are brushed off to the player. As you can probably guess from my short, poorly explained story synopsis, there isn’t much of a narrative in Bright Memory. There’s also an enemy militia led by an evil general named Lin, who’s hell-bent on stopping Sheila from preventing the end of the world. The story follows our protagonist Shelia Tan, an SRO (Science Research Organization) agent who’s called to duty on New Year’s when a mysterious black hole appears out of nowhere filled with mystical, historical armored warriors. This is the better, fuller version with enhanced, incredible RTX-capable graphics and then some.
#Bright memory infinite gameplay full version
It’s been on my mind ever since I watched the gameplay reveal trailer in what seems like ages ago now, and thankfully I had the chance to get my hands on it to see just how great it plays for myself.īright Memory: Infinite is the full version of its lesser prologue Bright Memory, which released last year. I’m pretty sure I’m not the only one who was astonished by Bright Memory: Infinite, the technical and graphical wonder of a game created by a single developer.
