
It is Sechenov’s robots and systems at these various facilities that begin… well, failing. P3’s main job is overseeing security for various facilities run by Sechenov and the government. Semi-sentient robots, advanced botanical research, devices that grant you instant knowledge, and so on are par for the course.

Set in 1955 in the USSR, Atomic Heart sees players step into the large shoes of Major Nechaev, also known as “P3.” Nechaev is in the employ of a scientist, Professor Sechenov, a member of a group of Soviet scientific geniuses whose technological marvels propelled the USSR to be the leading scientific nation in the world. But as I barrel into the core of Atomic Heart, I wonder whether this game is what it appears to be - or if it’s something much more interesting. It’s violent and familiar, like so many other first-person shooters. The game feels like it has only just finished its initial throat-clearing, now throwing open the door and hinting at some weird, sci-fi Soviet mysteries.


I’m 10 hours into Atomic Heart and the end is nowhere in sight.
