It’s tempting to frame Straftat as a throwback to an older, better time for the multiplayer FPS, when the lingo was coded in frags and gibs and sucking it down, when satisfaction was drawn entirely from performance rather than some convoluted, artificial system of progression. Not only would this be inaccurate, but it would also do a disservice to what Straftat truly is, namely a wild overcorrection in response to the direction of modern multiplayer gunfests, one that careens straight through retro stations to arrive somewhere new and exciting.
Straftat
Straftat recreates the experience of joining a random Half-Life or Quake deathmatch server in the year 2000
Babbdi was one of our favourite games from 2023. STRAFTAT is a multiplayer shooter from the same developers and it’s exactly as transportive as its singleplayer cousin; not transportive to an unknowable brutalist city, but to the year 2000 – in the best possible way. It’s out now.
I hope Straftat is 2024’s breakout shooter, because the demo’s 25 maps are gloriously unwholesome
“Do you have a ping of 1000 or something,” my opponent asked, during my inaugural bout of Straftat. Ah yes, this is it, that sense of unpleasantly intimate sheepishness. That‘s the withering late-90s chatbox scorn I’ve been missing, in this age of glossy live service multiplayer. I hid under a stairwell in order to meditate upon my response, then laboriously typed: “No, I just suck.” Right on cue, the other player tumbled into view and shredded me with an AK.
The player I met in my second match was more forgiving. “I honestly think the characters need more HP,” they said, generously. My wrists need more HP, actually. My eyes and reflexes need urgent patching.