Metascore
76

Generally favorable reviews - based on 14 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 11 out of 14
  2. Negative: 0 out of 14
  1. Mar 17, 2020
    95
    Beautiful Desolation is an essential entry in the Adventure Game genre and should not be missed. Gorgeous visuals, and evocative sound design compliment an exceptional sci-fi story filled with mystery, pathos, and good old-fashioned adventuring with some modern flair.
  2. Mar 13, 2020
    85
    Beautiful Desolation is a beautiful point and click adventure full of interesting situations and themes to be experienced.
  3. Mar 12, 2020
    85
    Beautiful Desolation is a idiosyncratic, multi-themed journey, bringing some interesting gameplay ideas to the table. Its story and distinct setting are its strongest assets and it will definitely take you places. Be aware though, there is no hand holding at all. You'll need to pay attention to the conversations with the cast of delightfully bizarre characters you meet, if you don't want to backtrack and fumble for clues constantly.
  4. Jul 19, 2020
    82
    If you manage to power through the dull first third of the game and let some of the design limitations slide, Beautiful Desolation will reward you with one of the best post-apocalyptic worlds ever created.
  5. Sep 5, 2020
    80
    Beautiful Desolation is a gorgeous game, with unique Afro-futuristic world waiting for you to explore it.
  6. CD-Action
    Apr 17, 2020
    80
    It looks and sounds fantastic but the gameplay revolves mainly around fetching stuff for people who tell you where to look for other stuff. [05/2020, p.70]
  7. Mar 13, 2020
    80
    The Brotherhood had a tall mountain to scale when delivering their follow-up effort to STASIS, but Beautiful Desolation succeeds admirably on most fronts. It may be a little too big for its own good, but an intriguing new world beckons, ready to amaze even as it provides lots of choice in shaping its stories.
  8. Feb 27, 2020
    80
    Beautiful Desolation is an isometric adventure that makes wanderlust, cutscenes and visual art its strongest and stunning points. Enigmas and dialogues are surrounded with weird, tribal-punk and futuristic vibes. The gameplay brings some of the issues of oldest point-and-click-games: vagueness and backtracking. Anyway, the overall experience is magnificent, non-linear and original.
  9. Feb 27, 2020
    80
    Beautiful Desolation is an old-school 2D isometric adventure, but like Stasis it's the story the true focus.
  10. May 6, 2020
    75
    Good point and click adventure game set in a retro futuristic apocalyptic world. It looks gorgeous on screen, and builds a complex and detailed world, but it has problems with the flow of information and what we must do next, along with pixel hunting issues. It is worth a try for the most experienced followers of the genre.
  11. Mar 27, 2020
    75
    Α lonely and gorgeous afrofuturistic adventure that offers a unique spin to a classic post-apocalyptic world, but would benefit by a quest log and/ or some sort of guidance over the flow of the narrative.
  12. Mar 23, 2020
    70
    The idea behind Beautiful Desolation is, unfortunately, its greatest success, let down by the way the game itself works. Still, this quaint trip into a world of post-apocalyptic retro-futurism is worth a try.
  13. May 8, 2020
    63
    Conceptually this is a beautiful adventure set in an interesting futuristic world, but suffers from narrative weaknesses as well mechanical problems.
  14. LEVEL (Czech Republic)
    Jul 22, 2020
    60
    Beautiful isometric adventure game with interesting story and characters. If you love Fallout and Die Antwoord is your blood type, Beautiful Desolation is a game for you. [Issue#302]
User Score
6.9

Mixed or average reviews- based on 41 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 17 out of 41
  2. Negative: 6 out of 41
  1. Sep 20, 2020
    5
    I played Fallout 1 and 2 as well as Baldur's Gate 1 and 2, Planescape Tourment, even Arcanum, so this one feels familiar. However, BeautifulI played Fallout 1 and 2 as well as Baldur's Gate 1 and 2, Planescape Tourment, even Arcanum, so this one feels familiar. However, Beautiful Isolation's main problem is that's just just an "impenetrable" game. It's unclear what's going on. So much that in the very first location I couldn't even understand what genre it is or what I'm supposed to be doing. It doesn't get better later on. Got stuck after the crashed troop transport, with no desire to continue.
    Sad, especially with so much great art wasted here. There are tiny little environmental animations everyone, and animated 3D dialogs with voice-overs. Gee, so much work for a boring point-and-click adventure or whatever this is.. You should fire your game designer. It's just criminal to waste artists' work like this.
    Full Review »
  2. Aug 11, 2021
    5
    I have one major issue with Beautiful Desolation and that is I find the objectives to be overly vague. Everything else has the makings of aI have one major issue with Beautiful Desolation and that is I find the objectives to be overly vague. Everything else has the makings of a good game. There is a screen that lists your overall quests but every one has many layers to it and different things that you have to do in order to complete it and it never updates. Couple with that the fact that the game gives little to no indication of what it wants you to do or where to go. I can understand and appreciate a game not wanting to hold your hand but on that spectrum hand holding is on one end and this game is on the complete opposite where somewhere in the middle would have been preferable. To give some examples there is one objective that states “help don”. Well to help Don first you have to find him which means repairing a ship; talking to a specific character that happens to give you a location he may be at; finding a first aid kit; finding Don and then using the first aid kit on him. The only way I was able to figure this sequence of events out was to talk to every person I saw and visit every location I could until I stumbled onto the info I needed. Another example is a mission where I need to find an offering of “flesh and bone” to appease a group but that is another multi layered objective requiring going to many places that you are given no hint of. I prefer more structure and less chaos in my game play. A better game would have dropped a few hints in some way to give me some semblance of an idea on what I need to do. Even having a marker on the map of what area an objective could be found in would have helped. There was an option for a “quest marker” but even with that on I never saw one anywhere. The graphics had a nice art style to them and I will single out the water as being very well done. The game may have taken place in a desert area but it had a good use of color that made it pop. The dialogue was fantastic as was the voice acting. I was really starting to enjoy the characters in the game if I could have enjoyed the game play. The story could have used more of an intro and explanation of the etch and people but maybe the game would have delved into things further. I will also say that I found some invisible walls scattered throughout, I would have preferred something blocking those ways such as a building as it looks better than an invisible wall.

    I played Beautiful Desolation on Linux. It had some technical issues as it froze once and crashed three times in my short time playing. There were 3 AA settings; a V-Sync toggle; and 8 other graphics options to tweak. Alt-tab didn’t work. You can manually save outside of cut scenes and dialogue windows. The game does auto save at various points if you want to use that. Performance was great although my GPU usage was often pegged at 100% despite the graphical detail not warranting it in my view. The game does have a built in toggle to display your frame rate, which is nice, but it also displays several other bits of info such as total RAM and VRAM. It would have been nice to just choose the frame rate to be displayed as I have software to monitor the others and it clutters up the game screen.

    Game Engine: Unity
    Game Version Played: 1.0.5.5
    Save System: Manual and Auto

    Settings Used: AA Extreme; V-Sync System Managed; all others at Extreme or On; 1920x1080
    GPU Usage: 25-100 %
    VRAM Usage: 1450-2346 MB
    CPU Usage: 8-25 %
    RAM Usage: 2.4-3.1 GB
    Frame Rate: 94-144 FPS

    Overall many parts of Beautiful Desolation were solid or great but figuring out where the game wanted me to go was a chore that got annoying fast and ended up making me quit the game after 3 hours and 35 minutes. There is a demo up for the game now but back when I bought the game it either wasn’t available or I didn’t notice it. I would suggest checking it out first before buying.

    My Score: 5/10

    My System:

    AMD Ryzen 5 2600X | 16GB DDR4-3000 CL15 | MSI RX 580 8GB Gaming X | Mesa 21.1.3 | Samsung 970 Evo Plus 500GB | Solus 4.3 | Mate 1.24.3 | Kernel 5.13.8-190.current | AOC G2460P 1920*1080 @ 144hz
    Full Review »
  3. May 26, 2021
    4
    WARNING THIS IS NOT AN RPG except from a similar post-apocalyptic world this game has nothing to do with Fallout games. This game is mainly aWARNING THIS IS NOT AN RPG except from a similar post-apocalyptic world this game has nothing to do with Fallout games. This game is mainly a boring adventure game made for casuals the gameplay is about solving stupid puzzles and reading texts very disappointing got bored with it and uninstalled it Full Review »