Matt Cundy, David Houghton, Nathan Irvine, Justin Towell write:Tsk. Bugs, eh. In games. Nothing worse. They're not meant to be there. But sometimes they are and that's where they stay until Mr Developer stops fiddling with his massive beard and decides to do something about it. And he always does something about it because he knows otherwise gamers will just refuse to play his broken piece of programming ever again. Because unlike developers, gamers actually have standards. Although that's not actually true. Because sometimes we'll happily play a game - even love a game - that has more bugs than an 80s rap jam.
Like what games exactly? Like these games exactly. The Top 7... horrendously buggy games we loved anyway.
Rockstar Games have leaked GTA 6 PC folders as well as Red Dead Redemption PC port folders in an update for GTA 5.
The official PS Store description of Red Dead Redemption has given away the imminent arrival of the game on PC.
I'll be getting this despite already having it on PS3. RDR is one of the few series I'd double dip for.
If you check the Sony store site, the reference to a PC port has been taken down. So right now there is no definitive proof but I imagine some sort of announcement will happen soon, maybe in the coming weeks. I'm picturing a fall release if it happens in 2024.
Fallout: Yesterday is the re-imagining of the cancelled Fallout 3 game, and it looks awesome.
Far Cry 2 was bad. Having to uninstall a patch to bug my way to a checkpoint in a building to be able to complete the game is not right. One buggy game. RDR was also really buggy. I enjoyed it but I did feel that I was experiencing too many bugs. I wasn't expecting it by the reviews that came out
I didn't know RDR was considered a buggy game. I don't remember having any bug problems at all with it. I've heard people complain about Fallout 3, but I only had that game freeze on me a few times. All the Elder Scrolls games have had bug troubles, but Morrowind was the worst from my experience and Oblivion was nearly bug free in comparison. Dead Island is my winner by a mile. Bug Island would be a more appropriate name.
Red Dead had plenty of bugs...I've caught a few I haven't even seen listed before as well (such as bright neon plants in the sky with rocks floating above).
Fallout's bugs come from an aged engine. I think we can only expect there to be issues...
But these are both good games and massive open-world games. Bugs should be expected. For the average player like myself...you can shrug off a few bugs and keep playing.
Spore. But looking beyond the bugs the games limited scope was more disappointing but you could still play it anyway.
Sid Meier's Railroads! There's almost no excuse for playing such a buggy game, but it is one of the only games of its kind and is fun.