The alien world of Saros feels like it has been touched by King Midas. The sky is golden after another impossibly frequent solar eclipse; rocks, specifically those of the precious resource Lucenite, radiate a shimmering amber. Even the body of our gruff hero Arjun Devraj (played by Rahul Kohli) is liable to turn deep, opulent yellow as he ventures further into the wilds of Carcosa. Should he die (a regular occurrence), the game cuts to stranger, more cryptic images, one of which is a double bed covered in gold silk sheets. It’s a fittingly blingy aesthetic for this time when gaming has scarcely been a more gilded activity (seriously, have you seen how much a PlayStation 5 costs these days?). Yet this incidental resonance aside, the resplendent gold-tinted presentation speaks to a game where every frame feels ablaze with magnificent light. Saros is, among other things, a third-person bullet-hell shooter.…