Jacob St-Amour from Link-Cable Writes: "Our second review of the day to focus on the South Park games, South Park: The Fractured but Whole is yet another crude and hilarious entry that no one else besides Trey Stone and Matt Parker could come up with. However, this newest game doesn’t provide the same gratifying experience in terms of gameplay as it ditches its traditional turn-based battle system for a more tactical approach, but once again, its story, characters and over-the-top obscene nature will have you crying in laughter from start to finish. Where it lacks in ingenuity, South Park: The Fractured but Whole delivers on all other aspects and should be considered the best title in the series thus far."
Over the last 25 years, there has been a fair few South Park games, and here GameSpew has ranked them all from best to worst.
We are going to see a lot of crap South Park products since they sold out to paramount years ago. It's their IP they can sell out, of course; it just means the quality of their show has tanked and other products as well. Nevertheless, they put on excellent musicals, but those haven't been sold to a mega corporation.
Loved the RPGs but never played the others. Have to track them down. Still not sure about Snow Day though.
The South Park series has somehow managed to stay relevant for over 25 years, but which are the best games based on the TV show?
The only two worth playing are Stick of truth and fractured but whole. The rest were garbage except snow day which I can't say anything about yet. But with that said, unlike stick and fractured which debuted as AAA full priced titles by ubisoft, snow day is a new developer and publisher and has a budget price at only $30 soooo
From Xfire: "A lot of video games are designed to make players feel like a superhero. However, very few actually feature superheroes or have players take on the role of a superhero. What makes this even worse is that there are even fewer superhero video games that can be considered good."
south park game got a link-cable. what?