Game review
The game starts with the opening of a reality television show appropriately called “Maneater.” You're introduced to the crew of the Cajun Queen and its Captain, Pierre LeBlanc, also known as Scaly Pete. Scaly Pete works exclusively as a shark bounty hunter along with his son Kyle who's working for him over the summer. You quickly get the impression that Scaly Pete hates sharks and would gladly rid the entire ocean of them if he could.
After the game's brief tutorial where you play as an adult female bull shark, you're captured and killed by Scaly Pete. Scaly Pete removes a young shark pup from the womb, mutilates it with his knife, and tosses it overboard, but not before the pup rips Scaly Pete's hand off. This is where the game really begins, with you as a three-foot-long baby bull shark in the middle of a Bayou Swamp.
You'll continue to swim, explore, eat, and grow while avoiding dangers along the way and finishing various quests and objectives. As you grow, you continue to see glimpses of the story of Pete and his son revealing the history and what not between the family and Scaly Pete's hatred of sharks. There are only a few cutscenes in the game but the reality television-style keeps it fresh and interesting. They even include hashtags, pop-ups, and other funny things you'd see in a normal reality television show which is a nice touch.
Your actions throughout the game are narrated by actor and comedian Chris Parnell. Most people would probably recognize his voice as that of Jerry from “Rick and Morty.” Chris does a fantastic job of delivering voice narration using a flat, educational tone. The story is interesting and keeps you invested in the world. The narration is a unique touch you don't see in gaming very often and it works well, especially since the shark can't talk.
The core gameplay of Maneater is to eat, explore, and evolve, and that's exactly what you do. You devour multiple forms of aquatic life as well as humans. Each time you consume a fish, reptile, or mammal, you're awarded health, experience and resources. When you've consumed enough things you'll level up, do more damage, swim faster, and even grow in size. While there are five stages of growth in the game, you're not limited to them. This means you grow a little every time you level up even if it's a small amount.
The biggest you can grow in the game is nine meters which is about twenty-nine feet. For reference, that is bigger than Bruce the shark from the movie “Jaws.” Some players might be disappointed that you can't grow into triple digits, like a megalodon. I was fine with the final size of the bull shark though. Besides, you need to be a reasonable proportion to navigate the world's eight different zones which are vast in scale and have beautiful visual designs.
The environments in Maneater are some of the most diverse, creative, and breathtaking surroundings I've seen in a video game in a long time. From swimming in trash infested, scummy freshwater lakes to exploring the vast depths and caves of the open ocean, each zone looks amazing and gives you a good amount of gameplay variety as well. Some areas like Dead Horse Lake are trash-ridden, green algae-infested cesspools with giant alligators waiting to take a chunk out of you. Others are mazelike canals that have a big subsystem of pipes and tunnels to explore. Some even challenge you to navigate and explore outside the ocean to reach shallow ponds, lakes, or even swimming pools.
You're able to easily navigate these big environments with a clearly labeled world map that can be marked with waypoints and points of interest uncovered by your shark's sonar ability. You use this constantly to discover landmarks, nutrition caches, and a lot of other collectibles you'll want to find.
Being a shark in water you have a huge amount of verticality at your disposal. Whether that's diving down into a gate, leaping over a wall, or flopping on land to slowly get somewhere. It's all fun and fairly easy to grasp using a controller.
Eating enemies is also incredibly satisfying. When you're small you can only nip and bite larger foes. This makes it feel like an aerial combat game, striking then circling around for another attack. As you get bigger towards the end, instead of nipping and biting enemies, you can hold them fully in your jaws.
Some types of prey offer strategic advantages over others, depending on the situation. For example, throwing sea turtles seems to stun enemies better than grouper fish.
Once you're past the starting zone, you're able to eat humans. This has a cost though. You'll gain “Threat” if you consume too many people and bounty hunters will be called to deal with you. It's a great system, one that constantly reminded me of wanted levels in Grand Theft Auto (GTA).
While eating people as a shark is great fun, this is an RPG and what would an RPG be without builds and classes? Maneater allows you to spend resources you gain by eating things and allocating them into the game's evolution system. The resources are divided into four types: Protein, Fat, Minerals and Mutagen. You spend these resources on leveling up various parts of your body and organs. You can have up to three different organ evolutions at once. These can vary from improving your health, making you faster on land, and even improving how much of a resource you get from eating something.
Maneater is a brilliant game but it does have some minor issues. Being a big, open-world game, I did run into a few fish that seemed to have frozen in place or had stopped moving altogether and aggressive enemies that seemed to forget that I was there after engaging with them. Sometimes while I traversed on land to eat people the camera would violently whip around and convulse for no reason.
The game's auto-targeting system is great and works well, however, early on in the game fights can be tough. Especially when there are multiple aggressive enemies around. This is due to the lack of a target lock feature. It can be annoying as you're trying to attack a target designated as highly dangerous only to have the game swing you into another smaller, unimportant target thus missing your window for a critical strike on your intended target. This was only noticeable early on in the game when more than two underwater enemies are focused on you. My Xbox One X also chugged at certain points during my playthrough, mainly when a lot of boats and evolution effects were on screen at once.
This review is based on an Xbox One key provided by the publisher. Maneater is available now for Xbox One, PS4 and PC for $39.99.