All Walls Must Fall PC review: A time-travel adventure set to techno tunes

There's quite literally no time to react in All Walls Must Fall, as you race to halt a nuclear launch.

All Walls Must Fall is a techno-tactics game that allows you to hop into the boots of secret agents who can travel through time. Throw in some seriously good music, excellent visuals, and unique mechanics, and you've got quite the strategy gem coming out of Steam Early Access on PC.

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Neon Berlin

All Walls Must Fall

The story commences in Berlin, November 2089, where the Cold War never concluded. For more than a decade both parties have used time travel for espionage, but now they're scrambling to send agents back in time to find out who's planning to launch a nuclear strike and cause worldwide chaos. This is where you, the player, comes into play by directly controlling agents sent back in time. Everything takes place on a single night and time is quite literally of the essence.

All Walls Must Fall makes use of a unique mechanic for movement and combat. Game time progresses when you perform an action, but you lose time resource every second. This invaluable resource is used to perform actions, go back in time to avoid shots taken and conversation failures, as well as interact with objects to make your mission a little easier. This makes it so you're always considering the next move and attempting to make the best use of available time.

All Walls Must Fall makes you constantly move and consider options.

Actions can lead you to take down enemies on sight or hide in shadows and hack into various objects to progress towards the mission goal. How you go about each mission depends on your playstyle and how much time resource is available, which is mainly collected by exploring the map. Everything shown on screen is displayed in an isometric view, and you have full control of the camera with some quick keyboard shortcuts.

The UI does a good job relaying all the information you need to glance at, and the game introduces various mechanics to you with quick-fire tutorial prompts. It's a well-refined experience that feels highly-polished with attractive visuals and effective atmosphere generation. The added benefit is it's based in a cyberpunk techno world with procedurally-built clubs, missions and a campaign to explore and enjoy.

Move to the beat

All Walls Must Fall

Sporting tracks from various talented artists like Ben Prunty (Faster Than Light) and Mona Mur (Kane & Lynch 2: Dog Days), it's hard not to move around a mission and enjoy the beat in the background. The techno tracks fuse perfectly with the cyberpunk setting and neon lights, bringing the nightlife in a Cold War Berlin to a whole new level.

Movement is a bizarre combination of real-time and turn-based, but it works surprisingly well once you get the hang of hotkeys. Time resource allows for handy abilities to be used, including going back in time a few steps to avoid that death shot you accidentally received. And when you're not grooving away and taking down foes, the available progression system allows for credits to be spent on weapons, upgrades and additional abilities.

All Walls Must Fall

Powered by the Unreal 4 Engine, I experienced no performance issues, nor did I encounter any problems with the game. For an Early Access release, that's quite the result. The only negative I had coming away from my top secret time-traveling adventure was the camera, which at times can leave you hanging by obstructing the view to important objectives or making decisions based on all factors at hand.

An issue that may appear for some players (especially those seeking a rogue-like game, which this is not) is the combat is relatively easy once you get the hang of things and have enough time resource to avoid damage. There are parts where multiple enemies make it a slight challenge, but overall it's more about getting through quickly, without taking a hit. I would have also liked to have seen a fog-of-war mechanic of sorts implemented, adding to the difficulty.

Ending the cold war

All Walls Must Fall

It's easy to see what games inspired All Walls Must Fall — think Superhot and X-Com — but developer inbetweengames managed to craft a unique setting and story that invites the player on a time-bending adventure through the Berlin nightlife in 2089. Implementing a time-sensitive system that forces you to make quick decisions and consider future actions on the spot, it's easy to pick up but difficult to master without a lot of practice.

Pros:

  • Great cyberpunk atmosphere.
  • Excellent soundtrack.
  • Unique combat and dialog mechanics.
  • Solid performance.

Cons:

  • Camera can be obscuring at times.
  • Difficulty isn't high.

All Walls Must Fall is a must-buy for any strategy game fan, especially at the price of $9.99.

This review was conducted using a copy provided by the developer on a Windows 10 PC with an Intel Core i5-6600K CPU, GTX 1070 GPU, and 16 GB of RAM.

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Rich Edmonds
Senior Editor, PC Build

Rich Edmonds was formerly a Senior Editor of PC hardware at Windows Central, covering everything related to PC components and NAS. He's been involved in technology for more than a decade and knows a thing or two about the magic inside a PC chassis. You can follow him on Twitter at @RichEdmonds.