Skip to main content

Shakespeare meets Firefly: sci-fi Verona puts the “star” in “star-crossed lovers”

Verona - Teaser - PAX East 2015
Earth is not faring well in the 22nd century. Mysterious, cosmic forces have pulled the planet into an inevitable spiral towards the sun. The polar caps have melted, the oceans are vaporizing, and society has all but collapsed after the world’s wealthiest fled the planet for safer colonies. Now it’s your job to go back and scavenge whatever valuable goods they left behind.

Verona is a third-person “value extraction adventure game” currently being developed by Prior Games (via PC Gamer). Apart from the above teaser, reveled at PAX East, and a few pieces of art, there isn’t much to look at yet, but the concept sounds fascinating.

“Inspired by the cult television series Firefly and Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet,” as the game’s website describes it, “this is a third-person action adventure that keeps on challenging you to ponder the material or emotional value of the riches you find.” The title, of course, refers to the setting of Romeo and Juliet. The trailer and website also allude to the Queen Mab, a space ship named in reference to Mercutio’s famous speech in the same play.

Related: Gone Home meets BioShock in space: Fullbright talks new project, Tacoma

The game is grounded in logistics, with your success measured primarily by the monetary value of what you manage to collect in each stage. The story promises to run much deeper, however. “There is no alien threat in the game and the protagonists’ role is not to save the universe,” said Prior Games CEO Theodore Reiker. “It’s a tale about greed, cruelty, love, and staying human in an inhuman world.”

Prior Games was founded in 2011 by the team behind Sine Mora, an ambitious and well-received 2.5D (two and a half dimension), side-scrolling, bullet-hell shooter featuring anthropomorphic animal characters in the vein of Star Fox. Verona looks to be a very different and much more nuanced beast. No release date or platforms have been announced, but the game was on display on PCs at PAX, so that’s a likely contender for initial launch.

Editors' Recommendations

Will Fulton
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Will Fulton is a New York-based writer and theater-maker. In 2011 he co-founded mythic theater company AntiMatter Collective…
3 things I want in Fallout 5 after watching Amazon’s Fallout series
Lucy enters a house in Fallout.

Fallout has been the watercooler TV show this month, an impressive feat for a video game adaptation. Although Bethesda doesn't have any new Fallout games to release alongside it, the Amazon Prime series has reinvigorated interest in Fallout, with all its titles seeing notable player count increases. For now, we’ll have to be content with a Fallout 4 current-gen upgrade, but I’ll admit that my mind is drifting to thinking about Fallout 5.

Bethesda’s Todd Howard has teased that Fallout 5 will be the next project Bethesda Game Studios works on after Elder Scrolls 6. While that likely means its release is at least a decade away unless Bethesda fast-tracks it, I still find it fun to theorize about where a true single-player Fallout 5 could go next. These three particular things are what I want to see the most.
Set it somewhere new

Read more
I was wrong about cloud gaming. One small setup change showed me the light
The Logitech G Cloud Gaming Handheld sits on a stack of comics.

I never had much faith in cloud gaming.

The reality of current internet infrastructure and reliability just felt -- and in many ways still feels -- too far off for streaming to provide a close enough experience to the "real" thing for gamers to accept. I even gave it my best shot to change my mind one year ago this week by committing to only playing games via cloud for an entire week. What I found was that, in my situation, there were only select games where the input delay was tolerable enough to consider it as a primary way to play. It's a great option for those who can't get expensive hardware, but it wouldn't find an audience among the hardcore gamers who have better alternatives.

Read more
This Dell gaming laptop with an RTX 3050 is discounted to $700
Dell G15 gaming laptop on a table.

You don't need to spend thousands of dollars to be able to get a decent gaming laptop, as there are budget-friendly options like the Dell G15 with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 graphics card. It's currently even cheaper at just $700, following a $200 discount on its original price of $900. We're not sure how much time is remaining on this offer though, so if you think this is the perfect gaming laptop for you, stop hesitating and proceed with the purchase immediately to make sure that you don't miss out on the savings.

Why you should buy the Dell G15 gaming laptop
The Dell G15 is highlighted in our list of the best gaming laptops as the best budget gaming laptop under $1,000, as it provides dependable performance while staying affordable for most gamers. It's equipped with the Nvidia GeForce RTX 3050 graphics card, which is perfect for budget gaming, and pairs it with the 13th-generation Intel Core i5 processor and 8GB of RAM. These specifications are more than enough to be able to play the best PC games, though you may have to dial down the settings for the more demanding titles.

Read more