Omikron: The Nomad Soul (Windows)

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Omikron: The Nomad Soul

Windows - 1999

Alt name The Nomad Soul
Year 1999
Platform Windows
Released in Brazil, Germany, Italy, United Kingdom, United States (1999)
Taiwan (2000)
United Kingdom (2002)
Worldwide (2013)
Worldwide (2016)
Genre Action, Adventure
Theme Amnesia, Cyberpunk / Dark Sci-Fi, Fighting, Puzzle elements, Sci-Fi / Futuristic, Shooter
Publisher Acer TWP Corp, Eidos Interactive Limited, Sold Out Sales & Marketing Ltd., Square Enix, Inc.
Developer Quantic Dream SA
Perspectives 1st-Person, Side view, Behind view
3.86 / 5 - 14 votes

Description of Omikron: The Nomad Soul

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Omikron: The Nomad Soul is a very ambitious 3D cyberpunk action adventure that should be considered a true masterpiece that renews the market's interest in the adventure genre.

It's got an outstanding plot, a truly epic scope, a unique premise, amazing freedom of movement more akin to RPGs than adventure game, and many optional subquests and branching stories to discover. And it pulls it all off with a wonderful 3D engine that gives birth to a remarkably lifelike, heavily-populated metropolis that looks like something out of Blade Runner-- without needing the latest 3D card or an Athlon to pull it off.

Unfortunately, the game's mass-market appeal is dulled by frustratingly difficult arcade sequences and some obscure or insufficient clues that make you feel lost in Omikron's virtually limitless freedom. Which is a shame, because Omikron is a thoroughly remarkable adventure that deserves to be called "revolutionary" and played by every fan of the genre. The French developer Quantic Dream set out to make something different, and it shows. You start out the game as a bodyless soul who has been called to Omikron, Earth's parallel universe, to help them sort out some trouble. In Omikron, your soul starts out in the body of Kay'l, the police officer who came to you for help - although you occupy his body a bit too soon to know what exactly you need help with. After getting your life saved from a menacing demon by a fellow policeman, you begin the game proper by travelling to Kay'l's apartment to find your first clues.This engrossing premise is developed into an even better story as the game progresses, full of interesting twists and turns. There are many inventory-based puzzles that are logical and well thought out, and finding clues in order to solve the mystery is a lot of fun. You will run into dozens of interesting characters, all of whom have a lot of things to say beyond the stock response of "hi, how are you." Many characters as well as Kay'l himself (who addresses you, the player who controls his actions, in second person) also offer a lot of help, but not so much that it takes away from the gameplay. Similar to the world in Aldous Huxley's Brave New World, you soon find that the people in Omikron are chemically and psychologically guided through life, worship a certain "Supreme Being." It is when you find out how to move your soul Kay'l to the other characters to control their actions that the game gets very interesting. The keyboard can control most of your actions. Despite its full-blown 3D world, Omikron plays a lot like some of the old adventure games such as Alone in The Dark. You can interact with almost anything in this fully 3D world, and everything moves and works fluidly. What makes Omikron an amazing achievement is the fact that its world is dynamic. Forget the static screens of most adventure games and cardboard characters who talk to you based on the written script regardless of how you treat them. Everything you do in Omikron has repercussions, especially how you speak to the other characters in the game. If you piss someone off, you will be denied important information. The level of interactivity along with the non-linear storyline make Omikron not only addictive, but replayable to boot. That is a claim that that very few adventure games can make. Unfortunately for all its strengths, Omikron does have some weaknesses that detract from the fun. Chief among these is the amount of fighting in the game, and the interface used to control it. Omikron has two types of fighting: armed and unarmed. The armed fighting puts you into first-person mode, hunting down the baddies with your futuristic weapons. The unarmed, however, is similar to 3D fighting games like SEGA's numerous arcade games. You attack mainly with the keyboard, setting up combinations you learn throughout the game. Adventure game fans with poor reflexes (like me) will find these sequences very frustrating, as they require tremendous skill at button mashing. Some of these fighting also seem out of place - it feels as if the designers drop them in periodically just so they can market the game as an action/adventure hybrid instead of a pure adventure game. This lack of trust in the appeal of traditional adventure is disappointing, but perhaps justifiable given the genre's comatose condition lately. (It is worth noting that Omikron wasn't commercially successful even with all the PR on action elements, thus making it a real underdog). Fortunately, you can train at Kay'l's apartment as often as you want. The game also inherits some annoying quirks from console games, such as the fact that you can only save at certain points in the game (marked by spinning rings). After you discover how to 'inhabit' different bodies, though, this becomes a lot less annoying because you will just reincarnate in the body of the person who is closest to you when you die. With an excellent plot, an innovative gameplay that combines the best of arcade and adventure genres (although a bit too much of the former), and very high play value (it took me almost 60 hours to beat the game, without following all the subplots - the 3 CDs are truly packed), Omikron: The Nomad Soul is one of the most original, atmospheric, and addictive adventure games in recent memory. If you enjoy innovative games such as BioForge or Blade Runner, chances are you will also enjoy this overlooked classic. As an added bonus, the game showcases a celebrity appearance by David Bowie and some original music by him that perfectly suits the atmosphere. Two thumbs up, way up!

Review By HOTUD

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Comments and reviews

Kavia 2024-07-12 0 point

So this is not available as abandonware, only as a paid product through GOG or Steam. I have the Steam version, bought and paid for, but it freezes all the time. Anybody manage to get it to run smoothly? I barely have 3 hours in the game and now it freezes and I can't continue.

Robotas 2024-04-03 0 point

For gamers of today, this game was the "Cyberpunk 2077" of the 90s, huge open world with a mix of game styles. This game deserved a brand new remake, to be more easier, less buggier and more prettier to play. Before this game, only "Dreamweb", "Beneath a Steel Sky", "Syndicate" and "Blade Runner" were the only cyberpunk games, but they were only adventures. With "Omikron", everything changed,
inspiring cyberpunk games like "Deus Ex" and eventually "Cyberpunk 2077".

old school kool 2020-12-06 0 point

This is probably the best game of all time. I have yet to find another game with such an immersive experience (feeling). A close second might be postal 2 in terms of exploration, but overall nothing comes close to ONS. The thrid FPS scene (factory) was the most action filled I've ever played in a video game - time is very limited and you have to do everything perfectly. Every place feels truly magical, out of this world, some I can compare to places from 'The Void', others from 'Postal 2' or 'Conker`s BFD', it seems that this game mashes every other game (driving, sandbox, fighting, fps, puzzle) and every subconscious scenery (map) into one and that's where any other game gets it's roots from. Of course that's not the case, however, this game definitely has a 'soul' if you will that will live on in many forms of expression.

pc gamer83 2020-11-16 1 point

very good and long but hard game

Tomsriv 2020-08-06 1 point

I loved this game. I actually had a lot more trouble with the shooting parts of the game as the mouse was too fast for me to aim easily. I was more used to the Doom style where you don’t need to aim up and down.
The body switching was a lot of fun and I recall a mod that let you switch around any body on any character.
Unfortunately I never beat the game. It was full of bugs and with the save system it was difficult time consuming and frustrating to try to beat the main bad guy. I think I finally did it once and the game crashed so I gave up.

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Buy Omikron: The Nomad Soul

Omikron: The Nomad Soul is available for a small price on the following websites, and is no longer abandonware. GOG.com provides the best release and does not include DRM, please buy from them! You can read our online store guide.

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