Some players in APB will spend hundreds of hours with the character creator, even if they spend little with the game itself. That's allowed. The city has three districts: the Waterfront and Commercial districts for combat, and a third social area where people go to talk, organise and customise.
Just how long do MMO’s last before going free to play? GameKeysNow takes a look
For every game that truly lives up to its potential, there are a couple that absolutely miss their mark. Be it a simple case of over hyping an unfinished product, to game systems that downright are broken, or even just a game being inexcusably horrible, some games just leave a terrible taste in people’s mouths.
I think rogue warrior needs to be on here. And why Isn't E.T. on here since we're talking about all time terrible games. That game single handily crashed the video game world.
For me Haze. I was interested to play it. That was until I played the demo. Picked it up in a bargain bin later on after its launch and I am glad I did........pick it out of a bargain bin and not pay full price
APB , that game went from having a 100mill dollar budget to bankruptcy so fast , it should be a record on its own
No Dude Nukem: Forever? That games had so much hype surrounding it and it turned out to be a steaming pile.
PC Gamer - The action-MMO first known as APB lives on as APB Reloaded. But if your memory serves, you’ll recall that the urban, massively-multiplayer shooter had a quick death: APB shut down just months after launching at the end of June 2010, coinciding with the dissolution of developer Realtime Worlds.
No location damage in this game. This means that damage is the same if you shoot them in the head as if you shoot them in the foot. The only way to kill is to keep shooting until you get them with enough rounds.
I really hate that aspect. And the animation physics are by their own admission very simple because they want to support people with lower internet speeds. That's really not fair to the people who pay for better internet and are still forced to play with the lowest common denominator.