
The desire to explain everything in turn causes what could have been a relatively decent story of deceit and collusion into an absolute cluster of mismatching and converging information. Alongside a world of turmoil is the day to day struggles of the Communist life of the Soviet Union. There is a world here, with many different pulls for power going on. Atomic Heart is very much a tale of twists, turns and mystery. It is at about this point that the story ceases to be as simplistic. An hour later, the robots have been turned into combat mode and the protagonist, P-3 or Major Nechayev (which I believe may be a reference to Sergey Nechayev a famous Russian Communist revolutionary) has been sent to capture the escape criminal responsible for turning the civilian robots into murder machines, which have been killing everyone in sight. The world is alive, there are people everywhere. The overarching grip of the Soviet Union is prevalent every which way you look in the communist utopia. A city that is full of life, colour and atmosphere. The opening sequence is one of the most impressive I’ve experienced in a long time. From the starting menu to the ending credits, there is deep love and enthusiasm put into every aspect of this game. This would introduce the THOUGHT device, which would allow humans to control robots with their mind.Ītomic Heart is a passion project. Scientist Dmitry Sechenov has created a special substance called ‘Polymer’, a neural network ‘Kollectiv’ and planned to include it in the next version of robots. What do you mean that’s a gardening robot? It’s got a saw blade for a head.Ītomic Heart takes place in 1955 within Facility 3826, a fictional USSR military base built to manufacture robots. Crispy critters! These atomic powered murder robots are lacking heart and emotion.
