A few days ago, an actual murder simulator was announced, with a gameplay video on YouTube. It was an oldschool roguelike with ASCII graphics, and even though most of the game was text, it was the most gruesome game ever conceived. The player snuck around, spied through windows, picked locks, slashed throats, sawed off limbs, and committed suicide after being shot by the police. It turns out the game was a hoax and doesn't exist at all.
CCG writes - "Star Wars Outlaws is fun, kept me engaged for about 90 hours, and Kay is a fun character to explore four fairly large environments with. It does a good job of faithfully representing the Star Wars galaxy far far away and stays mostly true to the lore and established characters. There are tie-ins to several of the movies and shows such as Solo and The Empire Strikes Back. If you like Star Wars and you can overlook the subtle and unnecessary woke expressions, then you'll likely enjoy the game. In my humble opinion Outlaws is over-priced at $70 for the standard game, so you may want to wait for a sale."
May is absolutely packed with new driving and racing games, from an indie police chase game to the next chapter of Codemasters’ F1 series.
Clair Obscur: Expedition 33 already has what it takes to follow in Stellar Blade's foosteps for its post-launch roadmap, and it arguably should.
Shame, I thought this looked cool!
A shame because it sounds like it could have been very cool.
Thats too bad...
wow, those guys are pricks in their response too.
I think they meant "statistically significant" instead of "quantitative portion," since quantitative portion doesn't really mean anything exception any group of quantifiable data, which could be one person.
wow those guys acted like jerks, guess they didn't get the responses they wanted