It’s a crying shame that there isn’t a new mech game to fill this column with every week. Let’s fix that with this slick-as-hell gif from Westgunne developer Jason Koohi. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings — Jason Koohi (@zanrai_int) November 21, 2020 From Hawken to Heaven Will Be Mine, I’m obsessed with a good Mech start-up UI (and it’s to my ever-lasting frustration that I never got one into Can Androids Pray). Koohi’s absolutely nailed it here with an ultra-stylish burst of analogue screens and neon lights, cranking up the anime with a brief cut to the cocky pilot before ejecting through the launch tunnel. Westgunne itself looks a fun enough side-scrolling shmup, sporting the same arcade flair as the studio’s previous Stardust Vanguards. But honestly, I think I’d be happy to just replay the launch sequence over and over and over again. Next up, we’ve worked out what happened to the vanishing middle class. Apparently, they packed up and took their white picket fences into orbit with Spaceship Troubles. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings — Mattias Ljungström (@maljx) November 21, 2020 Considering its premise - that of the last survivors of humanity fleeing a dead Earth to find a new home elsewhere - Mattias Ljungström’s city sim has a very whimsical, early-PC aesthetic. As the AI manager of this interstellar colony, it’s your job to keep the residents of this floating neighbourhood healthy and happy, managing the ship’s “fragile ecosystem” and ensuring the celestial town doesn’t crumble before it can make landfall on Earth 2. That I personally haven’t covered Thief-with-guns ’em up Gloomwood so far in this column is a crying shame. In my defense, developer Dillon Rogers shot out all the lights - how was I s’posed to see it? To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings Wishlist now to plunge the world into darkness at https://t.co/V1kdtgSR8m#gloomwood #screenshotsaturday pic.twitter.com/rw5qcOKe7K — Dillon Rogers (@TafferKing451) November 22, 2020 Remember when being able to shoot out the lights was the biggest deal? It was Splinter Cell, for me, but I remember the sheer sense of power that came with being able to change the visual balance of a scene with a bullet. 20 years later, it’s still a joy to see Rogers sprint through a space in some kinda light-snuffing speedrun, though I reckon it’ll have more practical uses in the final game’s pistol-whipping Thief-ish romp. Our last entry for the isn’t a game, so much as a chill music visualiser from Mothergunship artist Chris Zuko. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Manage cookie settings — chriszuko (@ChrisZukoArt) November 22, 2020 Oh, to be an orb vibing in the electrical currents of lo-fi jazzhop.