Recently I tried out physics sandbox Instruments of Destruction(opens in new tab), where you build the wrecking machines of your dreams—vehicles covered with rotating sawblades and swinging wrecking balls—and drive them full-tilt into puny, defenseless buildings. It's a smashing good time, perhaps not surprising as it comes from Radiangames, founded by the lead tech artist of Red Faction Guerilla.
Here in Abriss(opens in new tab), which launches into Steam Early Access this week, the concept is a bit different. This time you're not building vehicles to destroy brutalist architecture, but creating a standing structure of your own from various parts and pieces. Then once you've cobbled together your killer building, use it to knock everything else down.
At first you begin with a few tall beams and some super-heavy cubes that can be stacked up and then toppled into a nearby building, smashing through walls and floors like a collapsing crane. But soon you can add moving parts into the mix: a rotator that can be attached to the base of your structure so you can swing it like a mighty steel arm. And eventually you'll add lasers that cut through concrete, bombs that can detonate and take out supporting walls, and even a rocket thruster that can send part of your structure sailing through the air like a missile.
There's even a level where you can cobble together some blocks and let them tumble down a ramp where a giant piston is waiting to propel them into, and through, a bunch of waiting structures. Kablooie.
The physics-based destruction effects are all very pleasing as buildings shatter and tumble to pieces, but there's also a very chill vibe to Abriss. Can using a rocket to launch a heavy metal beam through four
Read more on pcgamer.com