The End is Nigh Review
I’ve been playing a ton of Edmund McMillen and Tyler Glaiel’s The End is Nigh. Having finally ‘beaten’ the game, I feel like it is now time to talk about it. Overall I can say I’m a touch torn on how I feel on The End is Nigh. While The End is Nigh is a solid platformer, there are a few design decision which don’t quite work for me. For a full look into The End is Nigh, check out my The End is Nigh review below.
What is The End is Nigh?
The announcement and release of The End is Nigh came out of nowhere. Edmund McMillen (of Super Meat Boy and Isaac fame), dropped a blog post featuring the teaser above, and announced that he and Tyler Glaiel (another Indie superstar), were set to release The End is Nigh on July 12th. While not much was shown, the game promised to be a difficult platformer with tons of levels.
Now that The End is Nigh is out, I can safely tell you what The End is Nigh is. In short, The End is Nigh is a precision platform in a similar vein as Super Meat Boy, BUT with a lean towards slower, puzzle solving approaches to each level. Like a normal platform, you move from right to left (or left to right in some cases); as you progress through each world’s levels (screen) towards the eventual world’s end. The further you get in the game, the harder things get. The harder things get, the more you die.
Gameplay
Gameplay in The End is Nigh hinges around one simple principle, difficulty. Like other games in the precision platformer genre, The End is Nigh punishes you for tiny mistakes over and over and over again. In my 30+ hours of playing, I have already surpassed 7k+ deaths and that’s only on one save.
Creating this difficulty is a slew of ever growing death traps. In the early worlds, you may have to make a simple jump over a gap, or jump between hooks on walls, but as things progress you face new obstacles like guns that shoot where you’ve last been, or lava that rises and falls in the span of a few seconds. Overall, I felt the difficulty to be pretty balanced for The Past (first part of game), but found that there was a noticeable spike in The Future (second part of game) that felt somewhat out of place.
Movement & Control
To tackle the platforming challenges that await Ash (the many character blob), there is a relatively shallow yet deep set of abilities. Ash can baby jump, super jump, ledge hang, ground pound, and that’s about it. While this may sound like a limited array of moves, McMillen and Glaiel do a good job of pushing these abilities to their absolute limit.
Controlling these simple mechanics was sometimes hit or miss for me. As a fan of using the gamepad for comfort, I found certain actions to be less responsive on the gamepad then on keyboard. I don’t know how many times I jumped for a ledge only to watch Ash faceplant into it and fall to his death instead of grabbing the ledge (same issue with baby jump vs mega jump). The fact that The End is Nigh is centers around precision, but gamepad controls feel imprecise at times, created some incredibly frustrating moments.
Collectibles
It wouldn’t be an Edmund McMillen game without a ton of collectibles, and The End is Nigh has a ton. Collectibles in The End is Nigh range from Tumors in every level, to game cartridges. Overall, there is a ton of stuff to collect, but a lot of it I found to be not worth the time.
The tumor collectible serves dual purposes. Collecting tumors provides a life pool in The Future (yes, you stop getting infinite tries), and also let’s you access a set of cartridges by collecting certain amounts. Tumors range from simple to grab, to down right complicated. If you are an unskilled player who needs all the lives you can get, you will more then likely need to collect many of the tumors in The Past to have a chance at beating The Future. This approach didn’t work all that well for me and seems to be a strange decision.
Alongside the tumors are cartridges or carts to collect. Cartridges are the main staple of The End is Nigh and essentially provide further content by allowing access to ‘retro’ levels when played on your home retro console. Many of these levels are far more difficult than anything in The End is Nigh‘s main story and really don’t feel all that rewarding to unlock. Instead of unlocking something that impacts the game in a fun or different way, fans instead get more difficult platforming to complete for achievements. This sort of grind felt incredibly unrewarding to me and completely misses the mark on time in = fun out.
Music
The End is Nigh features an awesome soundtrack from Ridiculon, who mash together classic music with metal, chiptunes, and a bunch of other debauchery. Take a moment to listen to the soundtrack and enjoy hearing classics such as Hungarian Rhapsody played in that Ridiculon way. I was blown away by the soundtrack and really feel that it’s a highlight of The End is Nigh.
Graphics and Aesthetics
As a major fan of McMillen’s work on The Binding of Isaac, I was immediately impressed with the art style and aesthetics of The End is Nigh. The End is Nigh captures the strange and twisted ideas of McMillen in a beautiful and cartoony way. Besides a few strange color decisions in the retro cart levels, I was impressed throughout my entire playthrough with the look of The End is Nigh.
Story/Plot
I don’t typically play McMillen games for the story and The End is Nigh is not really any different. While there is a surface level story about Ash and trying to make friends, it doesn’t really go anywhere all that interesting. Like other games made by McMillen, the more stuff you do, the more snippets of story unlock. Again the investment of time for the little reward the story delivered just didn’t feel worthwhile.
I also didn’t quite get the inclusion go Rich Evans. While I think he was good as Ash, he had a very limited number of lines and cutscenes. This seems like a total waste and really felt like a let down given all the hype around having RICH EVANS in the game.
Collection of Misc Things
Stability – Game ran well for me and I had zero problems.
Value – There is a ton of game here for cheap.
A Ton of Achievements – If that’s your thing.
Crazy Difficult Cartridge Challenges – If that’s your thing as well.
Tons of content – If you love platforming there is a ton here (600 levels)
Conclusion
I liked, but didn’t love The End is Nigh. While there is a fun game here, the obsession with difficulty really makes the experience falter through specific design decisions. Areas like The Future really aim to frustrate the player, but don’t present much of a rewarding payoff for success. The same can be said for the game’s collectibles. Instead of wanting to collect things, I did so either out of necessity or for the site. While both the art and music are incredible, The End is Nigh just didn’t fully hook me.
What I liked
+ Graphics + Aesthetics
+ Music
+ The little Rich Evans we get
+ Value
+ The Past
+ McMillen making a platformer again
+ Controls feel good most of the time
What I didn’t like
– The Future
– Collectibles
– The ROI on time can feel not worth it
– Controls can be janky on gamepad
– McMillen making this instead of Mewgenics