When this game was first announced it seemed like the developers were actually leaning into the interesting setting of southern US cults and antigoverment militias, but it is easy to see that they weren't expecting the response it got. Now it just looks like a $10 purchase to me.
The developers aren't American and so probably felt that this version of Montana was as fantasy as not-Tibet and far off magical tropical Pacific islands; it certainly doesn't feel any more real to me. Combined with that nutjob response from some parties about The New Colossus, and it's easy to see why Ubisoft would have ordered this game watered down into its current state.
That, or they came out swinging for the announcement trailer with no actual intent on sticking to its perceived promises, but no game company would do that, would they?
I like simple strategy/management games on my PS4, as compared to something like EU4 on my pc. This seems too simple. Every game would play out much the same way mysteries or no and the map is just so barren, though that at least is thematically correct.
If it's 60% off with some expansive DLC then I'll probably get it, but otherwise the one Quill18 playthrough I watched will be enough for me.
At $15, this looks dull. At $50, this looks terrible. Rorie is hardly the most effusive with praise, but even what he gave this game in this Quick Look seemed far too high. JRPGs aren't the largest or most active market out there, but there's still far better products than this or a FFX remake.
Brad seemed bored the whole way through too. That's not good video.
I'm all for 7, 8, and 9. A new trilogy, more shiny and not so shiny spaceships, even if it is all pretty cookie cutter some high production value and not terrible sci fi is a good thing to have around.
The other movies; the sidestories? I mean sure, Disney wants its money's worth and so they're gonna push as hard as they can. Fine.
But this fourth trilogy nonsense? Like an actual 10, 11, 12? Bloody preposterous mate. Give it ten years.
skuupin's comments