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Pixelated Playgrounds

Pixelated Playgrounds

By: Pixelated Playgrounds
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Taking one game per month (old, new and everything in between) and talking though an in-depth examination of narrative, mechanics, theme, and the interplay between the three.

Science Fiction
Episodes
  • Dispatch
    Jun 15 2026

    In this episode of Pixelated Playgrounds, Bryan and Josh suit up for Dispatch, the 2025 superhero workplace comedy developed and published by AdHoc Studio, originally released on PlayStation 5 and Windows. Founded by Telltale Games alumni including Michael Choung, Nick Herman, Dennis Lenart, and Pierre Shorette AdHoc brings their episodic storytelling DNA to a story about Robert Robertson, a powerless third-generation hero who, after the destruction of his Mecha Man suit, lands a job as a dispatcher for the Superhero Dispatching Network, managing a team of dysfunctional, reformed villains known as the Z-Team. It's a tale as old as time featuring a group of screw-ups slowly becoming a found family, but Dispatch pulls it off with so much craft and confidence that it feels fresh all over again.

    We dig into what makes Dispatch tick as both a game and an interactive series, examining its tight episodic structure, its gorgeous animation, and the way its licensed needle drops lend it the rhythm and credibility of a prestige streaming show. We also talk through the tension at the heart of the experience: this is a game that is, at times, less played than watched, and we explore whether the dispatching mini-game with its spiderweb stat graphs, skill-matching, and ongoing mission storylines does enough to make you feel meaningfully invested in the heroes you're sending into the field. Standout voice performances, particularly Aaron Paul's restrained but surprisingly expressive take on Robert Robertson, and a genuinely well-written ensemble help carry the load. The humor occasionally veers crude or cliché, but that's half the charm. So clock in with Bryan and Josh as we take the call on AdHoc's confident, polished, and wonderfully familiar Dispatch.

    Three Word Reviews:

    Bryan — Clichés Executed Flawlessly

    Josh — Its Super Effective

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    Less than 1 minute
  • Death Howl
    May 30 2026

    In this episode of Pixelated Playgrounds, Bryan and Josh journey through the afterlife in Death Howl! Developed by The Outer Zone and published by 11 Bit Studios, Death Howl is a deckbuilder that merges deliberate exploration, demanding combat, and stark, minimalist storytelling. Set in Mesolithic Scandinavia, the game features a mother named Ro who ventures into the spirit world to reclaim her lost son. Death Howl sets its self apart aesthetically with a rough, impressionistic pixel art and vibey sound design to its layered mechanics and themes. Interestingly its often billed as a “souls-like deckbuilder” a label that originated with the community rather than the developers. As ambiguous as the ‘souls-like’ term can be the game captures the spirit of the genre in meaningful ways: its bonfire-like sacred groves, its tense death mechanics that are both punishing and forgiving, and its constant encouragement to explore every corner for secrets and advantages, among other things.

    With tense combat focused on positioning, deckbuilding strategies, and the satisfaction of repeatedly crafting powerful synergies rather than settling into just one, Death Howl also succeeds on a mechanical level. The aesthetics and mechanics all stand in service to a game that is telling a story about death, loss, and what it means to confront sorrow. By blending its aesthetic and mechanical strengths to suit this story, Death Howl leaves a lasting emotional impression. So listen in as we go on a journey worth remembering in Death Howl!


    Three Word Reviews:

    Josh - Constrained Card Crafter

    Bryan - Soulslike, Not Derogatory

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    Less than 1 minute
  • Resident Evil Requiem
    May 15 2026

    In this episode of Pixelated Playgrounds Bryan and Clint are diving into Resident Evil Requiem, and coming at it from two angles: Bryan jumped on board with the series starting at Resident Evil 7, while Clint has been a lifelong devotee. Developed and published by Capcom, the game showcases a studio operating at full strength. We were struck immediately by the visual fidelity and the sound design, which is as tense and reactive as anything in the genre. The story follows FBI analyst Grace Ashcroft and returning series icon Leon S. Kennedy as they investigate deaths tied to Raccoon City, and right away we get a sense of the game’s defining idea: two protagonists, two playstyles, and a deliberate split between survival horror dread and full-throttle action.

    Its a novel approach to solving the problem that often causes Survival horror games to fall flat as the player becomes more powerful. Grace’s sections lean into vulnerability, limited resources, puzzle-solving, and slow, nerve-wracking exploration, while Leon’s segments let us cut loose with bigger weapons and chaotic combat. That push and pull gives the game a rhythm we found incredibly compelling, constantly resetting tension and payoff. Resident Evil Requiem doesn’t reinvent the series so much as perfect its modern form, elevated zombie camp executed with precision, and a reminder that Capcom has been quietly mastering this formula for years.


    Three Word Reviews:

    Clint - Old Meets New

    Bryan - Elevated Zombie Camp

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    Less than 1 minute
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