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发布于:2 月 2 日 上午 1:05

A Game That Grows on You - From Frustration to Fun!

Let me start by saying this: during my first hour with Sonic Frontiers, I was fully committed to closing the game, uninstalling it, and writing a negative review.

The opening felt overwhelming. I was bombarded with pop-up messages about skills, upgrades, slot-machine-style loot, constant hints, objective markers everywhere, and clunky, repetitive-looking cutscenes. Nothing about it felt natural or inviting at first. It was messy, noisy, and honestly frustrating.

But I decided to stick with it.

And I’m glad I did!

Once the game opens up and you start understanding its rhythm, Sonic Frontiers slowly reveals what it’s actually trying to do. Every 2.5D section, every enemy encounter, and every environmental obstacle feels like a small puzzle. None of them are particularly complex on their own, but they gradually become more engaging, more satisfying, and more cohesive. At some point, without even realizing it, I was fully pulled into the gameplay loop.

Yes, it’s a casual and arcade-focused experience. And yes, once you learn where to go and how things work, parts of it can feel repetitive. But there’s something oddly relaxing about it. It’s the kind of game you can unwind with, zone out, and just enjoy the movement and flow.

I could easily nitpick every bug, awkward animation, or design decision that rubbed me the wrong way during my playthrough. There were plenty. But instead, I’ll stop here and say this: Sonic Frontiers deserves to be experienced firsthand. It’s far better than it initially appears, and it surprised me in the best way possible.

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