I feel so blessed I totally get to play the sequel to New Vegas like one year after playing it for the first time!!!
Only "white" person is a Med, figures.
Vice (unsurprisingly) joins in the *Game wasn't anti-corporate/racist/whatever* crowd
Despite the corporate dystopia, it retains Fallout’s “gotta hear both sides” emphasis on player freedom and choice: Sure, you can “yeet the rich,” but the game is just as willing to let you shut down an environmentalist commune and shuffle the folks therein back under the corporate yoke if that’s the sort of asshole you wanna be.
(In fact, one of The Outer World’s most jarring attributes is the way the political frame in dialog options shifts from quest to quest and world to world. A variety of choices are always available (as is outright violence), but the range of dialog options offered is inconsistent. Sometimes, as in the opening quest which lets you de-power an entire corporate settlement, your character can inhabit a burn the corps down, let’s dance in the flames radical mode. Other times, its as if a different writer has picked up the pen, offering your character only resignation (or even naivety) as their most anti-capitalist tone. On the planet of Monarch, where one corp is trying to enact incremental reforms, I found myself rolling my eyes as my character seemed suddenly befuddled that the Corporate Board might break its own rules.
How dare the game look at both sides. MUUUUUUUH POLITICS. Probably would only be satisfied if you have LESS choices. All radical anti-corporate of course.
It's by Austin fucking Walker as well.
Sailor Woedica isn't a troll, I don't care what any of you say.Points for making the effort to be consistent.
Vice (unsurprisingly) joins in the *Game wasn't anti-corporate/racist/whatever* crowd
Despite the corporate dystopia, it retains Fallout’s “gotta hear both sides” emphasis on player freedom and choice: Sure, you can “yeet the rich,” but the game is just as willing to let you shut down an environmentalist commune and shuffle the folks therein back under the corporate yoke if that’s the sort of asshole you wanna be.
(In fact, one of The Outer World’s most jarring attributes is the way the political frame in dialog options shifts from quest to quest and world to world. A variety of choices are always available (as is outright violence), but the range of dialog options offered is inconsistent. Sometimes, as in the opening quest which lets you de-power an entire corporate settlement, your character can inhabit a burn the corps down, let’s dance in the flames radical mode. Other times, its as if a different writer has picked up the pen, offering your character only resignation (or even naivety) as their most anti-capitalist tone. On the planet of Monarch, where one corp is trying to enact incremental reforms, I found myself rolling my eyes as my character seemed suddenly befuddled that the Corporate Board might break its own rules.
How dare the game look at both sides. MUUUUUUUH POLITICS. Probably would only be satisfied if you have LESS choices. All radical anti-corporate of course.
It's by Austin fucking Walker as well.
That's clearly not the criticism though, is it. The review criticizes the lack of consistency which leads to a lack of choice. Sometimes you can be radical, sometimes you only have resignation. It seems like a fair criticism, why shouldn't we have the choice to have a consistently radical position if we're allowed to literally murder everyone in the game?
Steam is DRM.
Not by default. Steam's DRM is an optional component that developers can use (admittedly, most do).Yeah Steam IS DRM
You don't, you can start Steam in offline mode. Although in practice I rarely get Steam to start without an internet connection due to bugs where it tries to reach the Steam servers and update first.since you have to be online and all that shit to play.
"Bugs".Although in practice I rarely get Steam to start without an internet connection due to bugs where it tries to reach the Steam servers and update first.
"Bugs".
Currently I can't start offline mode which I believe is due to an update that refuses to install, but I've had problems with it since back in 2011 (then the problem seemed to be that Steam had detected a pending update but not downloaded it, and then refusing to start in offline mode until the pending update had been installed).A software bug is an error, flaw, failure or fault in a computer program or system that causes it to produce an incorrect or unexpected result, or to behave in unintended ways.
Viewers' chat comments control the character. It was pretty fun back in Twitch Plays Pokemon, but a first-person shooter is too fast for it to be fun.What the hell are they doing in that stream? First time playing a video game or something?
Of course I am. The bug was present when I was using Steam for a brief time in 2015, if Valve still hasn't bothered to fix something so basic then it's obvious what's going on here.Or are you insinuating that Valve fucks up offline mode on purpose?
Your Deus Ex avatar clouds your judgement. It's not a conspiracy, the answer instead follows the theme of this thread: Corporations care only for profit. And I don't think enough people care about offline mode that Valve would make money from fixing it.Of course I am. The bug was present when I was using Steam for a brief time in 2015, if Valve still hasn't bothered to fix something so basic then it's obvious what's going on here.
Of course I am. The bug was present when I was using Steam for a brief time in 2015, if Valve still hasn't bothered to fix something so basic then it's obvious what's going on here.
Has anybody who is not from California play/review this game yet? Would you use the word "safe" to describe TOW?
Has anybody who is not from California play/review this game yet? Would you use the word "safe" to describe TOW?