Since the early days of Doom and Quake, super-fast FPS games – the now-dubbed boomer shooters – have brought us some of the best PC games of all time. Combine that speed and power with one of the most luridly compelling settings, the eldritch unknown of Lovecraftian horror, brought to life in striking comic-strip style, and you have Forgive Me Father 2. One year since developer Byte Barrel launched it into early access, the full 1.0 release arrives today on Steam, and it’s one you’ll definitely want to see for yourself.
Forgive Me Father 2 ticks all the boxes of a great boomer shooter. It’s fast but slick, driving along its relentless action with a pulse-quickening soundtrack. The Lovecraft-inspired setting brings some fantastic atmosphere and design to the world, continuing the tale of the Priest from the first entry. It boasts a look that could stand out in any crowd; a dark fantasy whirlwind of gloriously vibrant comic book shading, lavished with blood and tentacles aplenty. And then of course there’s the guns, the beating heart of all the best FPS games.
It’s safe to say you’re spoilt for choice in this regard. Forgive Me Father 2 hands you some of the most inventive weapon designs I’ve seen in a long while, each lovingly animated with distinctive and bizarre firing styles. What starts out as your run-of-the-mill handguns, revolvers, and shotguns quickly descends into the realm of the eldritch and surreal…
I don’t understand the whole “boomer shooter” thing, when I suspect it was primarily gen X developing and playing DOOM, Quake, etc.
It feels like giving credit to those who don’t deserve it. IIRC, boomers were the ones trying to get these titles banned for violent content.
We might as well not exist. If I posted a picture of myself and asked 100 young people what generation I fit, bet 90+ come back with Boomer. Guess it serves us right for all the slacking.
Am I the only one who initially thought “boomer shooter” was a game like Postal, except your not shooting up a post office but nursing homes, republican rallies, churches, and other places boomers gather?