• Latest
  • Trending
TRON: Catalyst Review

TRON: Catalyst Review: More Style Than Substance

Kian's Bizarre B&B Review

Kian’s Bizarre B&B Review: The Most Original, and Flawed, Vacation of the Year

Outrageous Season 1 Review

Outrageous Season 1 Review: Champagne and Cyanide

F1: The Movie Review

F1: The Movie Review: An Engineered Ecstasy That Sputters at the Finish

Elio Review

Elio Review: Lost in a Beautiful Cosmos

Anne Burrell

Chef Anne Burrell Dies at 55; Culinary TV Mainstay Mourned by Fans

14 hours ago
Jurassic World Rebirth

Johansson and Bailey Lead ‘Jurassic World: Rebirth’ to July 4 Box-Office Showdown

14 hours ago
Jhaleil Swaby

Jhaleil Swaby Joins ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ as District 1 Tribute

14 hours ago
Ida Brooke

Twins of Arrakis: ‘Dune 3’ Finds Its Leto II and Ghanima

15 hours ago
The Rose of Versailles Review

The Rose of Versailles Review: One Heroine Can’t Save the Monarchy

Hell Motel Review

Hell Motel Review: Checking In, But Checking Out Early

FBC: Firebreak Review

FBC: Firebreak Review: Corporate Chaos and Cooperative Action

In Cold Light Review

In Cold Light Review: A Fever Dream in Neon and Dust

  • Home
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Gazettely Review Guidelines
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
GAZETTELY
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Anne Burrell

    Chef Anne Burrell Dies at 55; Culinary TV Mainstay Mourned by Fans

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    Johansson and Bailey Lead ‘Jurassic World: Rebirth’ to July 4 Box-Office Showdown

    Jhaleil Swaby

    Jhaleil Swaby Joins ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ as District 1 Tribute

    Ida Brooke

    Twins of Arrakis: ‘Dune 3’ Finds Its Leto II and Ghanima

    28 Years Later

    Sony Wows CineEurope With 28-Minute Zombie Preview and Aronofsky Heist Clip

    Rebel Wilson

    Rebel Wilson Details Blood-Soaked Set Accident Ahead of Bride Hard Release

    James Gunn

    Gunn Dismisses Director Rumors Swirling Around DC’s New Batman Film

    Simone Ashley

    Kosinski Explains Simone Ashley’s Vanishing Act in F1

    How to Train Your Dragon

    Dragons Breathe Fire into U.K. Box Office with £11.4 M Launch

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Kian's Bizarre B&B Review

    Kian’s Bizarre B&B Review: The Most Original, and Flawed, Vacation of the Year

    Outrageous Season 1 Review

    Outrageous Season 1 Review: Champagne and Cyanide

    F1: The Movie Review

    F1: The Movie Review: An Engineered Ecstasy That Sputters at the Finish

    The Rose of Versailles Review

    The Rose of Versailles Review: One Heroine Can’t Save the Monarchy

    Hell Motel Review

    Hell Motel Review: Checking In, But Checking Out Early

    In Cold Light Review

    In Cold Light Review: A Fever Dream in Neon and Dust

    Pop the Balloon Live Review 1

    Pop the Balloon Live Review: Netflix’s Glossy, Empty Remake

    K.O. Review

    K.O. Review: This Heavyweight Contender Lands Solid, If Predictable, Blows

    The Chelsea Detective Season 3 Review

    The Chelsea Detective Season 3 Review: The Moral Topography of a Postal Code

  • Game Reviews
    TRON: Catalyst Review

    TRON: Catalyst Review: More Style Than Substance

    FBC: Firebreak Review

    FBC: Firebreak Review: Corporate Chaos and Cooperative Action

    Date Everything Review 1

    Date Everything! Review: You’ll Never Look at Your Toaster the Same Way

    Lost in Random: The Eternal Die Review

    Lost in Random: The Eternal Die Review: All Style, Less Story

    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review

    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review: A Dialogue With Tradition

    Yakuza 0 Director's Cut Review

    Yakuza 0 Director’s Cut Review: Neon Lights and Brutal Fights

    Trident's Tale Review

    Trident’s Tale Review: Buried Treasure or Fool’s Gold?

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review: A Pixel-Perfect Prison Break

    MindsEye Review

    MindsEye Review: A Beautifully Empty World

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movie and TV News
    Anne Burrell

    Chef Anne Burrell Dies at 55; Culinary TV Mainstay Mourned by Fans

    Jurassic World Rebirth

    Johansson and Bailey Lead ‘Jurassic World: Rebirth’ to July 4 Box-Office Showdown

    Jhaleil Swaby

    Jhaleil Swaby Joins ‘Sunrise on the Reaping’ as District 1 Tribute

    Ida Brooke

    Twins of Arrakis: ‘Dune 3’ Finds Its Leto II and Ghanima

    28 Years Later

    Sony Wows CineEurope With 28-Minute Zombie Preview and Aronofsky Heist Clip

    Rebel Wilson

    Rebel Wilson Details Blood-Soaked Set Accident Ahead of Bride Hard Release

    James Gunn

    Gunn Dismisses Director Rumors Swirling Around DC’s New Batman Film

    Simone Ashley

    Kosinski Explains Simone Ashley’s Vanishing Act in F1

    How to Train Your Dragon

    Dragons Breathe Fire into U.K. Box Office with £11.4 M Launch

  • Movie and TV Reviews
    Kian's Bizarre B&B Review

    Kian’s Bizarre B&B Review: The Most Original, and Flawed, Vacation of the Year

    Outrageous Season 1 Review

    Outrageous Season 1 Review: Champagne and Cyanide

    F1: The Movie Review

    F1: The Movie Review: An Engineered Ecstasy That Sputters at the Finish

    The Rose of Versailles Review

    The Rose of Versailles Review: One Heroine Can’t Save the Monarchy

    Hell Motel Review

    Hell Motel Review: Checking In, But Checking Out Early

    In Cold Light Review

    In Cold Light Review: A Fever Dream in Neon and Dust

    Pop the Balloon Live Review 1

    Pop the Balloon Live Review: Netflix’s Glossy, Empty Remake

    K.O. Review

    K.O. Review: This Heavyweight Contender Lands Solid, If Predictable, Blows

    The Chelsea Detective Season 3 Review

    The Chelsea Detective Season 3 Review: The Moral Topography of a Postal Code

  • Game Reviews
    TRON: Catalyst Review

    TRON: Catalyst Review: More Style Than Substance

    FBC: Firebreak Review

    FBC: Firebreak Review: Corporate Chaos and Cooperative Action

    Date Everything Review 1

    Date Everything! Review: You’ll Never Look at Your Toaster the Same Way

    Lost in Random: The Eternal Die Review

    Lost in Random: The Eternal Die Review: All Style, Less Story

    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review

    Bravely Default: Flying Fairy HD Remaster Review: A Dialogue With Tradition

    Yakuza 0 Director's Cut Review

    Yakuza 0 Director’s Cut Review: Neon Lights and Brutal Fights

    Trident's Tale Review

    Trident’s Tale Review: Buried Treasure or Fool’s Gold?

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review

    The Siege and the Sandfox Review: A Pixel-Perfect Prison Break

    MindsEye Review

    MindsEye Review: A Beautifully Empty World

  • The Bests
No Result
View All Result
GAZETTELY
No Result
View All Result
TRON: Catalyst Review

F1: The Movie Review: An Engineered Ecstasy That Sputters at the Finish

Outrageous Season 1 Review: Champagne and Cyanide

Home Games Reviews Games

TRON: Catalyst Review: More Style Than Substance

Mahan Zahiri by Mahan Zahiri
12 hours ago
in Games, PC Games, Reviews Games
Reading Time: 7 mins read
A A
0
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on PinterestShare on WhatsAppShare on Telegram

The Tron name brings with it a specific aesthetic of neon lines and digital frontiers. Tron: Catalyst swaps the cinematic perspective for a top-down action viewpoint, setting its stage not on the main Grid but in the Arq Grid, a decaying server reportedly created by Kevin Flynn himself.

This digital world is on the edge of a catastrophic failure, a system breaking down after its creator’s disappearance. It provides a familiar yet distinct backdrop for a new conflict within the machine.

Players take on the role of Exo, a courier program whose function is upended by a system anomaly. This “Glitch” grants Exo the remarkable ability to manipulate time, replaying events to alter their outcomes. This power immediately paints a target on Exo’s back, pulling the program from a life of simple delivery routes into a complex conspiracy that threatens the entire server’s existence.

The Arq Grid is far from a unified society. Its political landscape is defined by the struggle between two opposing factions. On one side is Core, an authoritarian organization that maintains strict control over the Grid’s inhabitants. Opposing them are the Automata, a resistance movement of free-thinking programs. Exo is thrust directly into this power struggle, forced to navigate the tense environment and use their new abilities to prevent a total system reset.

A Fading Signal

The narrative framework of Tron: Catalyst tasks Exo with a monumental goal: unite a fledgling resistance against the authoritarian Core and investigate the nature of the “Glitch Storm” that threatens to wipe the slate clean. In practice, the story functions more as a breadcrumb trail, efficiently guiding the player from one mission to the next.

The writing accomplishes what it needs to do to push the action forward, but it struggles to build a palpable sense of stakes. The central mystery of the server’s potential demise rarely instills a feeling of genuine urgency, making the plot feel like a sequence of events rather than a gripping drama. This feeling is amplified by the game’s conclusion, which avoids any substantial resolution and instead acts as a clear setup for a future installment.

This lack of depth extends to the characters and their political affiliations. The factions of Core and Automata are fascinating on paper, representing the classic struggle between order and freedom that is central to the Tron universe. Yet, they are never given the space to become more than their basic archetypes.

Core functions as a generic oppressive force, and while the Automata resistance has interesting members, their motivations and history are left largely unexplored. The primary antagonist, Conn, is a menacing presence but ultimately feels like a simple extension of his faction’s will. The characters are distinct, but the political struggle they represent remains disappointingly two-dimensional.

In its presentation, the story adopts a visual style clearly inspired by the Tron: Uprising animated series. Character interactions are displayed through hand-drawn portraits with a clean, cartoon-like aesthetic, which gives the game a strong visual identity.

These scenes are accompanied by voice acting that, while a welcome addition, proves to be inconsistent. Some performances land effectively, while others fall flat, creating an uneven experience that can disrupt immersion at key moments.

The game’s connection to its predecessor, Tron: Identity, is handled with a light touch. While it is a direct sequel featuring returning characters and plot threads, new players will not feel lost. The narrative provides enough context to stand on its own.

However, this approach is a double-edged sword. By not requiring knowledge of the previous game, it also misses an opportunity to build a richer, more continuous world. The story never commits to a canonical outcome for Identity’s branching paths, leaving its events feeling more like a vague backstory than a direct and meaningful cause for the current conflict.

The Glitch Mechanic: A Loop of Missed Opportunity

At the center of Tron: Catalyst is the “Glitch,” a time-looping power that allows Exo to reset the current chapter. The rules are simple but intriguing: upon resetting a loop, Exo retains all acquired knowledge, unlocked abilities, and any opened shortcuts.

TRON: Catalyst Review

Physical items, however, are lost, and the memories of other programs are wiped clean, returning them to their state at the start of the loop. This distinction between what is kept and what is lost establishes a compelling foundation, suggesting a system ripe for clever manipulation and intricate puzzle-solving.

Unfortunately, the implementation of the Glitch rarely capitalizes on its own potential. The time loop genre is defined by games like Outer Wilds or The Forgotten City, which empower players to use their accumulated knowledge to experiment and break the cycle through their own ingenuity. Tron: Catalyst, by contrast, holds the player’s hand tightly.

Resetting the loop is almost never a strategic decision a player makes to gain an advantage. Instead, it is either a direct response to a failed objective or, more often, a scripted action the player is explicitly told to perform by a quest objective. The system functions less as a dynamic mechanic and more as a narrative device activated by a button press.

This transforms a promising concept into a significant missed opportunity. There are very few instances where a player can feel clever for using their foreknowledge in a way the game did not explicitly direct. While the earliest chapters are crafted with more care, weaving objectives into the reset mechanic in thoughtful ways, this design diligence fades. In later stages, the loop becomes a formulaic way to repeat sections, stripping the mechanic of its initial spark and leaving behind a sense of what could have been.

Style Over Substance

On the surface, combat in Tron: Catalyst is a visual treat. The action is built on a foundation of responsive controls and kinetic, snappy animations that successfully capture the fantasy of being an agile warrior program. Watching Exo dance through a crowd of Core enforcers, disc flying and ricocheting off walls, is undeniably stylish. However, this aesthetic appeal is skin-deep.

TRON: Catalyst Review

The fighting lacks a crucial sense of impact; enemies frequently absorb hits without any physical reaction, turning them into simple health bars to be depleted. This transforms what looks like a dynamic dance of death into a repetitive and often mindless hack-and-slash routine that fails to get the blood pumping.

The player’s arsenal is straightforward, consisting of standard melee combos and the iconic ranged Identity Disc attacks. The system’s most significant feature is its parry mechanic, but it’s also the source of a major design flaw. An upgrade available on the skill tree turns a successful parry into an instant kill against most standard enemies.

Once unlocked, this single ability trivializes the majority of combat encounters. There is little need for strategic thinking, dodging, or creative use of abilities when most fights, including the final boss, can be ended in seconds by simply waiting for an attack and pressing the parry button.

This lack of depth permeates the progression systems as well. The skill tree is small, and a player who is even moderately thorough can unlock every available upgrade long before the game’s end, eliminating any sense of meaningful character building or choice.

Other mechanics introduced to add variety feel similarly superficial. The ability to steal an enemy’s code to temporarily mimic their fighting style, for instance, rarely feels more effective than Exo’s default moveset. Consumable items like grenades come across as an afterthought rather than an integral part of your tactical options.

Compounding these issues are technical shortcomings and underdeveloped systems. Enemy AI is unreliable, with programs often getting stuck on the environment or simply standing still, unresponsive to the fight around them.

The game also includes a stealth system, but it is so basic and offers so little advantage that it feels entirely perfunctory. When fighting through a level the “loud” way carries almost no risk, there’s little incentive to engage with the slower, less interesting stealth approach, except in the few instances where the game forces you to.

A Beautiful but Guided Tour

Visually, the Arq Grid is the game’s most unqualified success. The art direction masterfully captures the essential Tron aesthetic—a world defined by glowing circuits, dark expanses, and chrome surfaces—while giving it a fresh identity.

TRON: Catalyst Review

The use of clean, hand-drawn sprites for characters and environmental details provides a welcome clarity, ensuring that even amidst chaotic action, the screen remains readable. This strong visual presentation makes the world a genuinely inviting place to inhabit and is a consistent high point throughout the experience.

The world itself is structured as a series of distinct sandbox maps, from the towering city of Vertical Slice to the broken, hostile Outlands. Each area has its own identity and navigational challenges. However, the potential for true exploration is consistently undercut by the game’s design.

An over-reliance on explicit map markers and objective guidance means the player is rarely left to discover things on their own. Instead of navigating by landmarks or learning the layout of the digital city, you are often just following an icon, which limits the satisfaction of charting your own course through this otherwise fascinating setting.

Of course, no Tron-inspired world would be complete without its iconic vehicles. The Light Cycle is introduced early and serves as an enjoyable tool for rapidly crossing the larger maps. Its sense of speed is exhilarating, but its controls can feel clunky and imprecise in the more cramped corridors of the Grid.

The game includes Light Cycle combat, but it is a limited affair that amounts to little more than activating light ribbons and avoiding enemy attacks rather than engaging in a proper vehicular duel. The Light Jet makes a brief appearance as well, but this segment feels more like a one-off, underdeveloped minigame than a meaningful addition to traversal.

The Ghost in the Machine

If there is one area where a Tron property is expected to excel, it is the soundtrack. The franchise is defined by its association with pioneering electronic artists like Daft Punk and Trent Reznor, who created scores that were as iconic as the visuals.

TRON: Catalyst Review

It is here that Tron: Catalyst delivers its most notable disappointment. The musical score is a surprisingly safe and subdued blend of orchestral and electronic sounds that fails to capture the high-energy, futuristic atmosphere of the series.

The music is often so understated that it simply fades into the background. It lacks dynamic range, failing to swell during climactic story moments or intense action sequences. The same repetitive tracks play during quiet exploration and frantic combat, creating a flat auditory experience that misses the opportunity to build tension or excitement.

While the general sound design for combat is functional, and the voice acting gets the job done despite its inconsistent delivery, the forgettable score leaves a significant void. The game looks the part, but it doesn’t have the pulse.

The Review

TRON: Catalyst

6 Score

Tron: Catalyst is a visually stunning machine with poorly optimized subroutines. It competently executes a basic action formula, wrapping it in a gorgeous neon aesthetic that perfectly honors the franchise. However, its most promising ideas—a time-looping mechanic and a deep factional conflict—are left underdeveloped. The result is a hollow experience; a game that is enjoyable in short bursts but lacks the narrative depth and mechanical complexity to leave a lasting impression. It's all style with very little substance.

PROS

  • Exceptional visual presentation and art direction.
  • Responsive controls and fluid combat animations.
  • A concise length that respects the player's time.

CONS

  • Core "Glitch" time-loop mechanic is scripted and underused.
  • Combat becomes shallow and repetitive.
  • Underwhelming story and a forgettable musical score.

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Action gameAdventureBig Fan GamesBithell GamesDevolver DigitalFeaturedTRON: Catalyst
Previous Post

F1: The Movie Review: An Engineered Ecstasy That Sputters at the Finish

Next Post

Outrageous Season 1 Review: Champagne and Cyanide

Try AI Movie Recommender

Gazettely AI Movie Recommender

This Week's Top Reads

  • Art Detectives Review

    Art Detectives Review: The Case of the Brilliant Man and the Underwritten Woman

    107 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Deep Cover Review: A Script for Chaos, Left Unread

    2 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Boglands Review: Shadows and Whispers in the Irish Mist

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Mix Tape Review: A Story Told on Two Sides of a Cassette

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Marshmallow Review: These Woods Hide Unexpected Secrets

    4 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The Survivors Season 1 Review: A Town Drowning in Secrets

    1 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • We Were Liars Season 1 Review: Paradise Lost on Beechwood Island

    3 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Must Read Articles

F1: The Movie Review
Movies

F1: The Movie Review: An Engineered Ecstasy That Sputters at the Finish

12 hours ago
Elio Review
Movies

Elio Review: Lost in a Beautiful Cosmos

12 hours ago
K.O. Review
Movies

K.O. Review: This Heavyweight Contender Lands Solid, If Predictable, Blows

23 hours ago
The Chelsea Detective Season 3 Review
Entertainment

The Chelsea Detective Season 3 Review: The Moral Topography of a Postal Code

1 day ago
Bride Hard Review
Movies

Bride Hard Review: Something Borrowed, Something Broken

2 days ago
Loading poll ...
Coming Soon
Who is the best director in the horror thriller genre?

Gazettely is your go-to destination for all things gaming, movies, and TV. With fresh reviews, trending articles, and editor picks, we help you stay informed and entertained.

© 2021-2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

What’s Inside

  • Movie & TV Reviews
  • Game Reviews
  • Featured Articles
  • Latest News
  • Editorial Picks

Quick Links

  • Home
  • About US
  • Contact Us
  • Advertise with Us
  • Review Guidelines

Follow Us

Facebook X-twitter Youtube Instagram
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Movies
  • Entertainment News
  • Movie and TV Reviews
  • TV Shows
  • Game News
  • Game Reviews
  • Contact Us

© 2024 All Rights Reserved for Gazettely

Go to mobile version