Atomic Heartās āsublime utopian worldā was accused of glorifying the USSR
āAtomic Heartā, a video game set in an alternate 1950s Soviet Union, topped the charts on the Steam digital sales platform upon its release on Tuesday. The title briefly held the number one spot despite not being available to Russian users of the service.
Developed by the Cyprus-based studio Mundfish, āAtomic Heartā managed to briefly dethrone āHogwarts Legacyā as the top-selling title on Steam, which is the biggest digital distribution platform for PC gaming. The new release soon slipped to a still-formidable second place in the charts, yielding to the overwhelming popularity of the Harry Potter franchise.
āAtomic Heartā is a first-person shooter that puts the player in the shoes of a KGB agent āin a mad and sublime utopian worldā of an alternate history USSR, shown as a technological wonder of robotics, albeit with a dark conspiracy brewing. The gameās unique retrofuturistic Soviet dystopia aesthetic has been cited as one of its main draws, although the style has also opened the game up to political controversy.
Ukrainian YouTuber āHarenkoā claimed that āAtomic Heartā glorifies the Soviet Union and the KGB, and called on Western players to boycott it. However, multiple American content creators discarded that notion, citing the subversive nature of āAtomic Heartā as a commentary on Cold War propaganda. Some also criticized developer Mundfish ā many of whose staff are Russian ā for not taking a stance on the conflict in Ukraine. The developers tweeted in January that they ādo not comment on politics or religionā and are a āglobal team.ā
YouTube game critic Luke Stephens argued on Friday that boycott calls appeared to mean that āa lot of people are simply engaging in McCarthyism, dismissing this studio, because it has Russians working within it.ā He added that this kind of logic was āa slippery slope.ā
The gameās success on Steam cannot be attributed to Russian users, as the digital storefront suspended sales in the country in response to Moscowās military operation in Ukraine. By EarthWeb estimates, there are around 11.5 million Russian users on the platform. Instead, āAtomic Heartā is available for purchase in the country via a service called VK Play.
āAtomic Heartā was positively received by critics, with review aggregator Open Critic currently listing it as 74/100 and its Metacritic score standing at 75/100.
The gameās success on Steam cannot be attributed to Russian users
or - hear me out, turns out most people just like playing Action/Adventure, RPG and FPS games, for whatever reason.
also the fact thereās a market for a new bioshock game (which atomic heart is probably gonna fulfil, due to it being a game commenting on political matters like cold war propaganda, as you said)