Atomfall is the first completely new IP from British developer Rebellion in seven years, and it feels like it's landing at just the right time. After years of quality Sniper Elite and Zombie Army instalments, the studio has been working away on an experience that's quite a bit different: a detective-esque undertaking in the countryside of 1960s northern England. This has resulted in a nice degree of curiosity ever since the game's original announcement, but now, three weeks away from launch, Atomfall is peaking.
A series of developer-led trailers and videos has seen interest in the PS5, PS4 game surge, and luckily, it's not just smart marketing. Having played a section of the early game for around 90 minutes, Atomfall is proving to be the real deal. The alternate universe proves gripping, and the mystery at hand a constant source of intrigue and excitement. If the full title shapes up in the same fashion, then this will be no sleeper hit — it'll get all the love and attention it seemingly deserves.
The plot setup alone is enough to attract eyes and ears: you wake up in a northern England village inside the quarantine zone setup surrounding a nuclear disaster. It's been five years since the blast, and all is not right. With mutants roaming the countryside and cults set up to the side, you'll need to discover what secrets the rural setting is hiding.
Our digital play session (livestreamed via Parsec) dropped us in the Casterfell Woods a few hours into the main story, with one lead directing us to visit Mother Jago by the mine's entrance. The hook of Atomfall is that despite presenting itself as a traditional objective, there's no guarantee it will actually lead anywhere.
A detective experience at heart, you have to separate fact from fiction, barter for information, and sneak behind enemy lines to crack the case. As Rebellion pitches it, some revelations are purposefully withheld and there are no promises around a satisfying ending. It's a pretty intriguing setup, and one that — at least in our short hands on time with the game — proved a real driving force.
Atomfall uses an open zone structure and lacks quest markers. When you find a new story lead, it'll be added to your log and the associated location will be pinned on your map. These leads come from exploring the environment and talking to people, with examples we found including audio logs from a downed helicopter and notes left hidden in basements.
It's up to you which clues you pursue to learn more about the area and uncover secrets, but since it's possible to fail leads and lock yourself out of story paths based on your decisions, there's always a bit of risk tied to your actions. Once again, Rebellion isn't promising you'll be content with your discoveries come the game's conclusion, so there's genuine stakes to the leads you see to the end and the others you ignore. As such, it's the sort of experience ripe for replay so you can see what you missed the first time and gain a better understanding of the overall narrative.
Combat plays a pivotal role in the space and time between those findings, though given we were playing the game over livestream, it wasn't the setting to draw any real conclusions from. Fighting our online connection as well as in-game enemies, we came equipped with cricket bats, axes, and guns to fend off cultists and soldiers. What came as a bit of a surprise was the amount of ammo our character was packing, and even more could be fairly easily sourced from the environment. You'll be scavenging tons of resources for crafting as you search new locations, and bullets are a part of that. As long as you don't go in all guns blazing, it seems like you could build up a pretty healthy artillery stock — or maybe this was only for the purposes of our demo.
We'll need to play Atomfall natively on PS5 before we can critique its other potential qualities, but what seems to be set in stone is the gripping mystery at its core. In the 90 minutes we got to play, uncovering new leads to chase was the clear highlight as we found fresh characters to pick the brains of and locations our map was missing. It was a thoroughly enjoyable process, which when drawn out over the course of a full game full of dead ends and story reveals, appears primed to result in one of 2025's narrative highlights.
Atomfall launches for PS5 and PS4 on 27th March 2025. Are you looking forward to the trip to rural England? Share your thoughts in the comments below.
Comments 42
Fallout In The UK Nice
I'm hopeful. It would be nice to have a big PS5 thing I wanted to play.
I was all in anyway but just enforces my decision to go all in day 1, it is very interesting and being from the UK (in the North too) I hope the setting delivers!!
Nice! Is there a third person option?
Got the game pre-ordered and i'm really excited. It sounds like Stalker and Fallout had a baby and have it live England and i'm all for that.
Okay this is sounding superb
I’m kinda looking forward to this one. Great preview, Liam, I’m excited!
@ItsAlwaysSunnyyy No
Hope this does really well 👍
Meh. It looks AA.
Could this be a title that combines the wonderful mystery of The Forgotten City with a fallout-like gameplay? I'd have to play that...
Removed - inappropriate; user is banned
Sounds very interesting! The gaming schedule this year is already getting away from me.
One of my most anticipated game of the year so far! Can't wait for this one. I know it's been compared to Fallout a lot but those looking for that exprience may be disappointed. It's a mystery detective game first and foremost with combat as the sideshow. Survival does play a big role too. There is no hand holding so again not like a Bethesda game.
pre ordered ages ago looking forward to it
Would explain why Sniper Elite 6 was just an expensive DLC - all the team’s efforts were going into this.
@heavyartillery56 (#11) that's a good thing!
In some of the clips, the enemy AI seems poor with them not seeing you even in peripheral vision and probably making a lot of noise. Interested when playing it if that was a frequent issue. Looks great and the premise/no quest markers sounds good too, but worried about enemy intelligence and the fact that the start of the clip had three enemies that seemed to be all the same model.
@PerpetualBoredom Not really. It's just a game with a smaller budget.
@heavyartillery56 Considering the amount of studio closures and cancelled projects, it would be a good thing to see games been successful that don't break the bank to be made.
@AdamNovice If you are a game reviewer you probably care about the health of the industry, but if you are a regular gamer with a job you probably only care about receiving good games. And most good games are AAA. Unless you are into some niche genres that only indie studios target.
The YT video looked interesting, the heart beat monitor applying when shooting bows.
@heavyartillery56 that's a rather narrow minded point of view in my opinion. Most games that made a long lasting impression ob me were 7/10, AA games. Mostly, these even push the artform and try new things. But you do you, enjoy your gaming!
I'm a bit concerned in 2025, they are still releasing this on PS4... I always feel this will impact the quality of the native PS5 version.
I need to know if we're getting a 60fps PS5 version, if that's locked to 30, I'm out...not interested.
@PerpetualBoredom I don't think it's narrow. It's common sense. Big studios push boundaries and release products that excite as opposed to merely intrigue people.
Another interesting looking title I may have to jump into. Yet another day one release on gamepass though. Normally I'd be like that's totally cool PlayStation has all these amazing exclusives,... but no not really not this generation. when I look back the last 3 years and all of the day one 3rd party releases, it's just sad what Sony is doing this gen, with all the hardware and remasterake cash grabs...
Think I'm going to get this. I'm from Cumbria so it would be rude not to
Rebellion are on to a winner I reckon. Sniper Elite games have always been great but nice to see them gambling on doing something a bit different and it paying off.
Got it pre-ordered.
Mutated Alfred Wainwright boss battle or I'm out
Everything about this is looking promising.
GP day one for sure
I still have my iodine tablets from the time they gave every house in ireland a packet due to the concerns over Sellafield.
Atomfall and Hell is Us - they seem somewhat similar, but I can't wait to play both!
@heavyartillery56 AA is where you usually see more creative and passion driving games. I love AAA games but most of them play it safe to appeal to the biggest crowd possible and will no doubt have Publisher inflicting BS on to it.
I'm very interested in this one and very much considering a day one purchase.
Already preordered and waiting. I'm a huge Rebellion fan. They deliver with Sniper Elite and Zombie Army games. Strange Brigade was an underrated gem too.
I watched some gameplay on YT, I think I’m going to wait for reviews first. The lack of traditional quests concerns me a bit.
Not crazy about 1st person games, but this does look really good.
I'm looking forward to playing this. Plus it's available on game pass so will try it out before porting to ps5.
Hmm... Probably not a day one for me, but if I find a physical copy at the right price it's a maybe... My interest is certainly piqued...
Not for me at all. Looks like a complete bore-fest imo.
Looks like it has potential! This is the first year I’m super excited for what this gen has to offer. There have definitely been great games along the way. But as far as a through out the year line up. ‘25 is looking pretty pretty pretty decent
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...