logo
Revenge of the Savage Planet review: corporate incompetence becomes slapstick sci-fi

Revenge of the Savage Planet review: corporate incompetence becomes slapstick sci-fi

Digital Trends05-05-2025

Revenge of the Savage Planet
MSRP
$50.00
Score Details 'Revenge of the Savage Planet plays its open-world formula safe, but it shows its teeth where it matters.'
Pros Sharp satire
Enjoyable exploration
Clever environmental puzzling
Co-op play is a plus
Cons Story peters out by the end
By the books structure
Dull combat
Table of Contents
Table of Contents Sound familiar? Colonialist mayhem
To make it in today's cutthroat world, sometimes it feels like you have to be a taker to survive. It's a ruthless mentality that makes the rich richer, crooked politicians more powerful, and countries more bloodthirsty. They take, take, and take until there's nothing left for the rest of us, hoarding money, eliminating jobs, and destroying homes in the name of self preservation. Perhaps that's what makes your typical video game so appealing. In something like Red Dead Redemption 2, players get to live out a true power fantasy: one where a world is theirs to take. Animals exist to be skinned, plants to be plucked, and corpses to be looted. Even in games where we're meant to be the 'good guy,' we're often embodying the world of the worst. We become natural disasters that ravage worlds until we choose to stop playing.
Recommended Videos
Revenge of the Savage Planet takes that subtext and mines it for satirical gold, just as its hero smashes every rock in sight in search of precious metals. Building on the sci-fi comedy of 2020's Journey to the Savage Planet, developer Raccoon Logic only gets more explicit about its targets while moving the series from a Metroid Prime homage to a third-person adventure game that hides righteous anger behind irreverence. When you don't have the power to be a true taker, you can at least take no prisoners.
Though its story ultimately feels unfocused and its one-note action leaves it lacking in identity, Revenge of the Savage Planet succeeds as a sci-fi romp. It lets players loose into a series of interplanetary playgrounds designed to be sucked dry by a corporate drone tasked with becoming a bully. It's a charming slice of dark comedy that's perhaps not mean enough to totally land its point.
Sound familiar?
It doesn't take long for Revenge of the Savage Planet to show its teeth. Upon starting my adventure, I'm greeted by a corporate orientation video. A peppy vice president tells me that I am now a member of Alta Interglobal, a holdings company that has acquired my previous employer, Kindred Aerospace. As part of the new family, my job is to be part of an intergalactic colonization mission. Once I unfreeze from my cryopod after a century of sleep, I'll be dropped on a planet with a habitat and tasked with creating a livable community that Alta can later fill with inhabitants.
That's followed immediately by a second video informing me that I've been fired while asleep, as Alta has axed the entirety of the Kindred staff post-acquisition.
Revenge of the Savage Planet ultimately aims for the irreverence of an Adult Swim show.
That setup will likely sound familiar to you in any number of contexts. Most recently, it's the story of media holdings company Valnet acquiring gaming website Polygon, only to immediately gut the majority of its staff. If you know anything about the Savage Planet series' developer, though, you'll recognize a more personal target for Racoon Logic. Following the release of Journey to the Savage Planet, the studio was bought by Google as part of its short-lived Stadia initiative. Google would shut down Racoon Logic (then known as Typhoon Studios) just a few years later before it could even produce a game. That trauma is very clearly at the center of this sequel, with Alta standing in as the face of corporate incompetence.
The story is at its best when it tugs on that thread. One running sidequest has me uncovering Alta's dirty laundry, taking what I imagine are thinly veiled shots at Google's own issues behind the scenes. Less successful is where the narrative ultimately ends up. The stretch up to the final battle takes a left-turn into a meta-commentary about game design that feels entirely disconnected from the Alta story. It's an underwhelming conclusion that leaves me wondering if all the corporate satire before it is there primarily as an inside joke for the developers (I can't fully blame them; I'd jump at the opportunity to get my just desserts against my worst bosses too).
Don't take any of it too seriously. Revenge of the Savage Planet ultimately aims for the irreverence of an Adult Swim show. ultimately aims for the irreverence of an Adult Swim show. There's a world called Nuflorida. My habitat is filled with over the top commercials that feel like they were pulled out of a Tim and Eric episode. It features an original song about pissing on the company dime. As light as its jabs may feel at times, it still lands plenty of little hits that got some consistent chuckles out of me.
Colonialist mayhem
If you're still looking for more depth, Revenge of the Savage Planet is most functional as a broad satire on the world's worst C-words: colonialism and consumerism. As a stranded Kindred employee trained to suck planets dry, each open-world area I visit is a candy shop that's mine for the taking. The premise isn't anything new: Each planet is filled with resources to mine, map activities to check off my list until there are none left, and animals to research — or kick until they explode into a green mist. Everything I gather can be brought back to the computer at my habitat and run through a 3D printer to get new upgrades for my gun, jump pack, and more. The more of a jerk I am, the more efficiently I can bully the local wildlife and hoard resources.
If the first Savage Planet game was a spoof of Metroid Prime, imagining Samus Aran as a total dick out to disrupt Tallon IV's peace, the sequel is more of a riff on Subnautica. It's not a survival game, but it does play with some similar ideas. I need to gather up resources and safely return them to my base to 3D print new gear, craft outfits, or make furniture to decorate my habitat. If I die before I get home, I'll need to go back out and pick it all up again. Is it right to shoot an adorable little alien racoon just so I can have a pool table? That's what Revenge of the Savage Planet asks through its gleeful cartoon mischief. My little space man sure doesn't seem too upset about it, as he joyfully wobbles around and punts critters like soccer balls.
A a delightful sequel that perhaps could have benefitted from being a little meaner.
Naturally, Raccoon Logic gets to have its cake and eat it too. Even if it's classifiable as parody, it still plays its open-world exploration straight much of the time. I get new gizmos that allow me to grapple up to cliffs, grind on rails, swim underwater, and more. I eventually gain the power to melt amber blockades with goo bombs so I can get chow down on an egg and get a health upgrade. It's a serviceable, if a little boilerplate, Metroid-adjacent hook, but it still ultimately aims to be a slice of lighthearted fun that can be enjoyed or with a friend in co-op play. Maybe that's why the story stops short of really pulling the big guns out: Raccoon Logic is still interested in making the kind of game it's poking fun at.
I don't mean that as much of a knock here; that's just the language of this type of genre video game. If anything, the power fantasy isn't strong enough to intoxicate and poison me. Combat is particularly weak, as my primary weapon is a dinky pea shooter laser. Most enemies just need to be taken down by peppering them with dinky shots, and upgrades like dodge rolls barely charge that. I can scan critters to find their weak spots and attack for extra stun damage, but even its by the books boss battles never feel all too exciting. If you're going to make me feel like a power hungry prick, at least dial up the absurdity to tempt me down the path of violence.
Sometimes Raccoon Logic's heart feels like its more in crafting fun little environmental puzzles than colonialist destruction. My favorite gameplay moments have me using conductive goo to carry an electrified mushroom's charge to a closed door, or navigating an invisible maze by spraying green goop to reveal where the walls are. There's a sincere joy in figuring out how the handful of alien planets work, from a worm-filled desert to a multi-level mountain. Journey to the Savage Planet's Metroid Prime-inspired scan visor returns too and remains a highlight, allowing me to catalogue every plant and critter I find. I'm torn between being a researcher and a menace; the former is more enticing, but the latter drives the satire.
I'm left with a delightful sequel that perhaps could have benefitted from being a little meaner. In both Savage Planet games, I find myself wishing that Raccoon Logic would really let me have it. Allow me to really screw these alien worlds up and punt me into the stratosphere once I've crossed too many lines. But then, I'd be a scapegoat, wouldn't I? It's like when The Last of Us scolds players for carrying out acts of scripted violence that they can't avoid. I'm no taker; I'm just trying to survive in the kill or be killed environment that the developers have placed me in. I can empathize with my little spaceman through that lens. He's just a jester in Alta's corporate circus, just as Raccoon Logic was a cute plaything to Google.
Perhaps we're all a little blameless for playing into a world that's designed as a slapstick colosseum that we're forced to compete in. And if we're all clowns to the world's most powerful forces, maybe it's time to change which butts we're punting into the sun.
Revenge of the Savage Planet was tested on PC and Steam Deck OLED.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode 2 Release Date, Where to Watch
Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode 2 Release Date, Where to Watch

Newsweek

time2 days ago

  • Newsweek

Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode 2 Release Date, Where to Watch

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. Newsweek AI is in beta. Translations may contain inaccuracies—please refer to the original content. Entertainment gossip and news from Newsweek's network of contributors Rick and Morty Season 8 is now officially underway. In this article you'll see when and where to watch episode 2, Valkyrick. It follows episode 1, Summer of all Fears, which aired 25 May, 2025. In that episode, we see Rick use a variety of unorthodox methods to discipline the kids. According to the official episode 2 synopsis, "Space Beth calls her dad for a ride." Space Beth was introduced in the season 4 finale, Star Mort Rickturn of the Jed, after Rick clones his daughter Beth Smith (Sarah Chalke). You can see where her and Rick's often rocky relationship goes in episode 2, details of which you'll find below. Rick and Morty return in season 8 Rick and Morty return in season 8 Adult Swim Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode 2 Release Date The second episode of Rick and Morty Season 8 is called Valkyrick and airs Sunday, Jun 1, 2025, 11pm EST on Adult Swim. Rick and Morty Season 8 Release Date Rick and Morty Season 8 premiered on 25th May 2025, airing at 11pm EST on Adult Swim. It came roughly a year and a half after the conclusion of season 7. Where to Watch Rick and Morty Season 8 Rick and Morty Season 8 is exclusive to Adult Swim, so you can catch all the new episodes there. That's not all. The show has also been greenlit for seasons 9 and 10, so Adult Swim is now the show's home. "It'll feel like a return to form and kind of like a 'we're back, baby' kind of feeling, and hopefully, season 9 will be that but, you know, even more so," co-creator Dan Harmon tells The Verge. "But it'll be because it's been a gradual process of just trying to get our wind in our sails again." Rick and Morty Season 8 Episode Schedule Check below for the full release dates of all ten episodes in Rick and Morty Season 8. • S8.E1: Summer of All Fears -Sun, May 25, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E2: Valkyrick - Sun, Jun 1, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E3: The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly - Sun, Jun 8, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E4: The Last Temptation of Jerry - Sun, Jun 15, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E5: Cryo Mort a Rickver - Sun, Jun 22, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E6: The Curicksous Case of Bethjamin Button - Sun, Jun 29, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E7: Ricker Than Fiction - Sun, Jul 6, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E8: Nomortland - Sun, Jul 13, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E9: Morty Daddy - Sun, Jul 20, 2025, 11pm EST • S8.E10: Hot Rick - Sun, Jul 27, 2025, 11pm EST Rick and Morty Season 8 Cast Ian Cardoni and Harry Belden are back as the voices of Rick and Morty respectively. After Justin Roiland was axed from the show for alleged misconduct following season 6, season 8 marks the second time they're playing the characters. They're joining series mainstays Chris Parnell, Spencer Grammer and Sarah Chalke. • Ian Cardoni - Rick • Harry Belden - Morty • Chris Parnell - Jerry Smith • Spencer Grammer - Summer Smith • Sarah Chalke - Beth Smith • Ice-T: Magma-Q • Keith David: The President • Peter Serafinowicz: Oxygen-S/Eight/Infinity Rick and Morty Season 8 Trailer Check out the 1m35 trailer for Rick and Morty season 8, featuring shootouts, riots, and more inter-dimensional travel. If you were wondering, the song is Tryouts for the Human Race by Sparks.

I Watch a Lot of Sci-Fi, and This Mind-Altering Adult Swim Show Is One of the Year's Best
I Watch a Lot of Sci-Fi, and This Mind-Altering Adult Swim Show Is One of the Year's Best

CNET

time3 days ago

  • CNET

I Watch a Lot of Sci-Fi, and This Mind-Altering Adult Swim Show Is One of the Year's Best

Before I get into it, I must come clean: I am not a big fan of present-day animation. Sure, I can get down with some anime classics and will always give experimental stuff like Love, Death + Robots a shot. But there's this unfortunate trend of cookie-cutter projects getting the green light with the goal of replicating the success of animated hits like Rick and Morty instead of giving risky, original, cutting-edge programs a chance to find an audience. All this said, Adult Swim's conspiracy thriller Common Side Effects floated under my radar when it premiered on Max this year. I was aware of its existence but paid the show no mind. With names like Beavis & Butthead's Mike Judge and The Office's Greg Daniels attached as executive producers, you'd think I'd have perked up. Well, I didn't. My watch-list as a TV critic is always crowded, and, honestly, my patience for trying shows like this is quite slim. Yet, one of my goals for 2025 is to fight the persistent urge to say no. So I eventually found it and clicked play. And hoo golly, I'm glad I did. Alan Resnick plays Zane, the drug-loving pet store owner in Common Side Effects. Screenshot by Aaron Pruner/CNET Common Side Effects centers on Marshall Cuso, an eccentric anti-establishment dude who goes out in public bare-chested and preaches the wonders of a special blue mushroom (known as the "blue angel"). It was discovered in the jungles of Peru and contains magical properties that can cure any medical ailment. When there's a limited supply of a wonder-cure-all mushroom, the possibilities of solving humanity's problems can boggle the minds of those striving to uphold the greater good. Unfortunately, there is also a collection of selfish, profit-minded opponents who have a considerable presence in the world. So if word got out about such a discovery, you'd have to expect Big Pharma, rogue criminals and special interests within the government would all come out of the woodwork to get control of the substance. Read more: Max Streaming Service Review: Loads of Content, but You Have to Make It Fit You Being a stereotypical recluse whose closest friend is a tortoise named Spartacus, Marshall is evidently dedicated to keeping this mushroom discovery close to the vest. Yet, after running into Frances (Emily Pendergast), an old high school friend he believes he can trust, he lets her in on his secret. Unbeknownst to him, she works for a pharmaceutical company named Reutical and is the right hand to the company's dopey CEO, Rick Kruger (voiced by the iconic Mike Judge). These events, which all transpire in the first episode, kick off a layered conspiracy that finds Marshall fighting tooth and nail to keep his mushroom safe from the power-hungry hands of greed that will eventually come to surround him. On one side, there's his potential relationship with Frances, which leads the audience to consistently question her motives and how their partnership could put Marshall in danger. On the other side are quirky DEA agents Copano (Joseph Lee Anderson) and Harrington (Martha Kelly), tracking Marshall's every move. To them, he's a domestic terrorist tied to the illegal drug world. You have a group of backwoods militia who align with Marshall's mission to grow this mushroom but they're part of the illicit drug world I just mentioned. Mike Judge voices Reutical Pharmaceuticals' CEO Rick Kruger in Adult Swim's conspiracy thriller Common Side Effects. Adult Swim Topping off this conspiratorial triangle is Jonas "the Wolf" Backstein (Danny Huston), the sinister owner of Reutical, whose influence impacts politicians, the FBI and other such government entities. Backstein is the epitome of bad guys. He's kind of like this show's version of the Smoking Man from the X-Files. Our would-be hero -- this harmless, unbuttoned, tortoise-loving man who just wants to help people -- ends up being a high-value target on multiple watchlists. His journey to save humanity turns into a race to save not just others' lives but also his own. All while opponents with ulterior motives consistently fire weapons at him, spy on his every move and erratically chase him down on the highway. The result is a riveting conspiracy thriller unlike anything I've seen in an animated series. Okay, here's where I do my best to quantify all the ways Common Side Effects is a success. First, I have to acknowledge the creative narrative skills of the show's co-creators, Steve Hely (who cut his teeth on comedies like The Office and Veep) and Joe Bennett (the man behind the beautiful, yet creepy, animated series Scavengers Reign). They put their heads together and blended their understanding of comedy, crisis, capitalism and conspiracy to create a program that taps directly into the zeitgeist. On the other side of the coin is the show's nature element. This aspect of the story recalls the type of science-minded individuals who journey into the jungle to find new medicines. Aside from the Ayahuasca vibe of it all, this component further examines the public's hunger to find alternate cures aside from what Big Pharma could be pitching, as well as digging into the negative cost these ecosystems undergo, all in the name of profit. I realize how heavy this all sounds. But, trust me, it's all worth your time. Common Side Effects does a fabulous job of balancing the drama with a steady flow of unique bits of levity. Through captivating animation sequences, like the ones depicting the mushroom's various types of hallucinatory drug trips, the offbeat relationship dynamics of nearly every character featured in the show -- the partnership of Copano and Harrington is an absolute highlight; pet store owner Zane is a laugh riot -- the unique synth-heavy score by Nicolas Snyder (which reminds me of The X-Files, as well) and the impeccably placed needle drops, the show delivers a storytelling experience that is equal parts thought-provoking and awe-inspiring. Oh, and it's fun. To offset all this magic, the creators found a voice cast that delivers an understated performance, which oddly elevates the story. These are actors who are not at all acting and what I mean by this is that everyone's dialogue has a flawed quality, which helps ground things in a relatable human way. The show embraces mistakes, stutters and deadpan inflections, which coincide with its rudimentary animation style quite well. As grandiose as the story becomes, these elements offset things in a welcome way while steadily building the emotional stakes. I never thought I'd connect so much to a shlubby mushroom nerd, but here we are. Joseph Lee Anderson and Martha Kelly play DEA agents Copano and Harrington in Adult Swim's conspiracy thriller Common Side Effects. Adult Swim With shows on Adult Swim, I have seen a whole slew of big creative swings that, to me, haven't fully stuck the landing. Common Side Effects is a breath of fresh air for the studio. It's original, enthralling and delightfully unpredictable. A surprisingly hopeful vibe permeates the story through all the drama and kept me glued to the screen. Simply put: This is one of the best sci-fi shows of the year. I'm not sure I'd have the same opinion if it were live action. I truly hope season 2 will continue pushing the story envelope and expand the miraculous canon of Marshall's mushroom mission. Until then, you can find me recommending the brilliance of Common Side Effects to anyone who'll listen. This is the hill I shall die on. It's that good, trust me.

When do new episodes of ‘Rick and Morty' come out? Season 8 schedule, where to watch
When do new episodes of ‘Rick and Morty' come out? Season 8 schedule, where to watch

USA Today

time3 days ago

  • USA Today

When do new episodes of ‘Rick and Morty' come out? Season 8 schedule, where to watch

When do new episodes of 'Rick and Morty' come out? Season 8 schedule, where to watch Show Caption Hide Caption Sarah Jessica Parker on new 'And Just Like That' season Sarah Jessica Parker reveals why audiences are rooting for Aidan and Carrie in new season of "And Just Like That." "Rick and Morty," the grandpa and grandson duo you can't help but love, are officially back in business. Season 8 of the adult animated sci-fi series returned May 25, nearly two years after the last season was released. Adult Swim first announced the premiere date and gave viewers a first look at Season 8 during the annual April Fools' Day broadcast special, where fans were treated to a 22-minute theatrical compilation of "Rick and Morty" moments. "Rick and Morty is back for Season Eight! Life has meaning again! Anything is possible!" according to the show's official logline. "Look out for adventures with Summer, Jerry, Beth, and the other Beth. Maybe Butter Bot will get a new task? Whatever happens, you can't keep Rick and Morty down for long. People have tried!" The duo and the rest of the Smith family will continue to embark on adventures around the world and throughout the multiverse for at least four more seasons, show co-creator Dan Harmon confirmed to fans at a New York Comic Con panel in October 2024. "Nobody wants a universe without Rick and Morty," Harmon told Deadline. "Fortunately, the list of places to go remains infinite." Wondering when the next "Rick and Morty" episode is going to drop? We've got you covered. 'Rick and Morty' Season 8 episode schedule New episodes of "Rick and Morty" will be released every Sunday at 11 p.m. ET/PT. The 10-episode season began May 25 with "Summer of All Fears" will conclude with "Hot Rick" on July 27. A full episode schedule is outlined below: Episode 2: "Valkyrick" – June 1 Episode 3: "The Rick, The Mort & The Ugly" – June 8 Episode 4: "The Last Temptation of Jerry" – June 15 Episode 5: "Cryo Mort a River" – June 22 Episode 6: "The Curicksous Case of Bethjamin Button" – June 29 Episode 7: "Ricker Than Fiction" – July 6 Episode 8: "Nomortland" – July 13 Episode 9: "Morty Daddy" – July 20 Episode 10: "Hot Rick" – July 27 Watch the 'Rick and Morty' Season 8 trailer How to watch 'Rick and Morty' Season 8 All new "Rick and Morty" episodes will premiere on Adult Swim first. You can view Adult Swim programming, including "Rick and Morty," through your television provider or on the Adult Swim app. New episodes will be available for purchase from digital retailers the day after they premiere on Adult Swim, the adult-oriented television programming block said in a news release. You will be able to stream Season 8 of "Rick and Morty" on HBO Max and Hulu in September. (Seasons 1 through 7 of "Rick and Morty" are currently available to stream on both Hulu and HBO Max.) Hulu offers an array of subscription options to "fit a variety of budgets and entertainment needs." A basic streaming plan (with ads) starts at $9.99 a month, however, the price may increase if you switch plans, choose to bundle, purchase add-ons, or add an extra member. We occasionally recommend interesting products and services. If you make a purchase by clicking one of the links, we may earn an affiliate fee. USA TODAY Network newsrooms operate independently, and this doesn't influence our coverage.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store