While not being able to chat kind of sucks, the upside is that it'll keep your party "in character" and prevent everyone from spoiling each scenario's scares. Instead of using a keyboard or headset to converse with your group, the game requires you to talk to them through limited, situation-specific text selections like, "I have the key!" or "We're all going to die!" Communication isn't only important, it's the key to staying alive in Raccoon City. Using your chosen character's unique skills (such as lock-picking, playing dead, or creating MacGyver-style improvised weapons), you'll work with the other survivors-up to four of the eight selectable bodies will be live players-to find a way out of the city. Here's the setup: A waitress, a cop, a surgeon, a plumber, a security guard, a reporter, a subway conductor, and a computer expert walk into a bar, but before a lame joke can ensue, a horde of unruly zombies breaks in, starts wrecking the joint, and begins gnawing on the closest warm bodies. Supposedly, it's better with the hard drive that shipped with Final Fantasy XI, but it's something to be wary of from the outset. Combine that with the fact that areas are small and filled with a lot of doors, and then you'll see the problem. Without a HDD, every door you walk through will require a pretty substantial loading time. Granted, it was likely done to keep the sense of tension high, but in the end it seems to discourage teamwork, and isn't that what cooperative online games are all about?Īnother major gripe is that there's a lot of loading. With such a loss in communication, the result is that you and the other players often wander off alone, circumventing that whole interaction thing that makes online games so fun. You can only communicate with teammates through 'ad-lib'? movements that only encompass a few short phrases that are really no help at all. That's right, no voice chat and no chatting with a USB keyboard. However, here's the hefty downside: there's little to no communication with your teammates.
If you loved it before, you'll probably love it here. Yet despite these differences, Resident Evil: Outbreak is essentially the same as previous incarnations: your ultimate goal is still survival, which is achieved by shooting zombies and solving puzzles while overcoming the often-awful camera angles. Another staggering difference is that Resident Evil: Outbreak is divided into five different scenarios that are pretty independent of each other ' meaning, there's no longer a cohesive story. Your adventure is completely independent from one another, and there's really no pressure to work together. However, just because you're stuck in the same boat doesn't mean you have to work together.
There are still plenty of zombies that are achin' to gnaw at your neck, but now instead of going at it alone, you're working with several other characters - controlled by either the computer or other players if you take it online - to complete the scenarios. We wish you a merry Christmas and a happy new year.Fret not Resident Evil fans, Resident Evil: Outbreak is essentially the same game you know and love minus a few changes. ?Īll bundles are available during Steam Winter Sale - hurry up before the Grinch snatches all those presents on January 5th! So if you are interested in one of the games offered in a Starter Bundle, you get meaty package containing the main game, a DLC and the official soundtrack. The industrious Kalypso Elves helpers have also wrapped many a motley bunch of gifts that are perfect for newcomers - the Starter Bundles!
The Best of Kalypso Bundle including Tropico 6, Dungeons 3, Railway Empire & Sudden Strike 4 - bringing you our strategy and simulation classics in one handy package that’ll keep you busy throughout the holidays and beyond! Santa's little helpers have put together a very special package for you. The holidays are close and we already found some festive bundles under our Christmas tree, we'd like to share with you.