This is a review for the game The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe. The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe is the world's first expan-sequ-oot. It provides NEW CONTENT and many more laughs.
Oof, it's hard to write like that. In 2013, The Stanley Parable was unleashed upon the world and turned gaming on its head. More absurdist art piece than video game, The Stanley Parable was wickedly funny, shockingly original, and meta when meta was peak meta... meta.
In 2022, The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe was released with little buildup, shocking everyone and once again starting gamers down the journey to discover just WTF it was.
Story: The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe is primarily a remake of The Stanley Parable. I would like to focus on the added content for this review because The Stanley Parable deserves its own discussion; however, you can't talk about Ultra Deluxe without the original.
The Stanley Parable is about the player character Stanley, a mindless office worker who finds himself in a Monty Python sketch that won't end—so, just a regular Monty Python sketch. Stanley discovers that he is the only one in his office and must find out why, escape, or break the fourth wall into a thousand tiny pieces.
Ultra Deluxe is all these things and more because it is both a sequel, an expansion, a reboot, and a revisit to one of the funniest games of all time.
You once again take the role of Stanley, but this time the game's extra content focuses on the philosophy of a game sequel, a celebration of the first game, and some truly heartbreaking moments of existential crisis.
Gameplay: It's a walking sim where the whole point is to find all the different paths and endings, listen to the funny dialogue, see the funny images, and occasionally click on things.
Sound: The actual sound effects are as barebones and stock as possible—it leans into the lo-fi/Garry's Mod charm of the original. What stands out is the voice work of Kevan Brighting, who carries the game. We listen to his dry British wit and delivery as he berates, befuddles, and bewilders the player. It's a legendary performance.
Technical: Ultra Deluxe adds new 4K textures or something, but the game still looks like a student project. It appears to be held together by code on the fly and a bunch of stock assets.
It probably could run on a potato and is stable.
Movement is stiff; the only player feedback you get is from jumping and clicking on things.
Let's just say the technical aspects of The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe are not why you are playing it.
The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe is the way to play The Stanley Parable. As someone who played the original almost a decade ago and revisited the new one relatively recently, I was surprised at how surprising it still is. It has an aspect of, "Oh, what's around this corner? I hope it's funny."
Just give The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe a try. Go in blind and just play with it. You'll have fun, you'll laugh, and maybe even be impressed at how it gets you to think.