10°

HookedGamers preview: Postal III

HookedGamers writes: "You are the Postal Dude and you're just trying to get by in life as it throws one screwy thing after another at you. All you want to do is make enough money so you can survive as the global economy collapses around you. However, it's up to you to decide how you want to do this. Feel like being a hero? Why not help out the locals by thumping pesky soccer mums who are causing trouble? Or if you're out for yourself, why not blow a bloody hole in a granny's head while ripping apart a terrified teenager with a ferocious badger? Sound fun? Well in Postal III you can do any of those things and much, much more. "

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hookedgamers.com
50°

Postal 3: When Does Delisting Games Matter?

Justin from NoobFeed writes - Games like Postal 3 sometimes get delisted and disappear forever, but is this something that actually matters when the game is bad?

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noobfeed.com
Inverno520d ago (Edited 520d ago )

It's about preservation. Doesn't matter how bad the game, the movie, the book, the history was. It has to be archived, so that 10 years from now we can be like "oh yeah, this shite exists" and then again in 50 then 100 and then we can be like "this was what they were doing 100 years ago, how interesting"

110°
2.0

Review: Postal 3 (New Gamer Nation)

The Postal games have always been somewhat of a mixed bag in terms of how they are received. The first two were not masterpieces by a long shot, but they have somewhat of a cult following. In case you haven't heard of the series before let’s bring you up to date, that's if you haven't already clicked off after realizing this wasn't a review for Portal 3. The first Postal game was released back in 1997 by American developer Running With Scissors (previously Riedel Software Productions of Spy vs Spy fame). A 3D isometric violent shooter that put you in the shoes of The Postal Dude, a guy pretty down on his luck that wants to slaughter everyone in town with a wide-array of weapons, it was pretty extreme at the time. The sequel released 6 years later, now a first-person affair in an open-world. Again as The Postal Dude, it's more of same except there were objectives added in the form of chores, such as buying milk from the grocery store or picking up your paycheck from work, and you could choose to go about it as a decent, upstanding citizen or you could just cause mass chaos. Anyway, while both games weren’t reviewed by critics too well, they were particularly fun for what they were.

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newgamernation.com
90°
3.5

Postal III Review - Gaming Nexus

From the review: "The Postal series of games have been primarily known for the controversy caused by their extreme levels of violence, disregard for graphic content, and exploitation of stereotypes. With the change from the Unreal to the Source engine, Running with Scissors had a chance to take the franchise beyond the simple foundations of bad humor and shocking imagery of past games. Unfortunately, Postal III continues in the tradition of its predecessors by containing generic gameplay, off-color humor, and an assortment of bugs that hinder the overall experience."

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gamingnexus.com