Author Topic: Revelations 2012 - THIS GAME IS SO BAD. WHY THE forget IS IT ON STEAM  (Read 1229 times)



Another game trying too hard to be playable and fun, but it just ends up being stuffty.

Another game trying too hard to be playable and fun, but it just ends up being stuffty.
its laughable.

The character models.

My god.

They look like something from 1999.

Quote from: Buretsu
My god, have you seen their website? Their COO is like 80 years old. The two programmers graduated from DEVRY 11 years ago IN ENGINEERING. Six of the EIGHT members of Dark Artz are RELATED TO EACH OTHER. THe lead creative director ADMITS HE DOESN'T PLAY VIDEO GAMES. Their motion capture is ONE DUDE IN A SUIT. The animator HAS DONE NO ANIMATING BEFORE. CHIEF GAMING OFFICER is a position there. Their one positive review on Steam? THEY PAID FOR IT. forget them.

oh god

oh god ike wants this game on steam.

the real answer is so then left 4 dead and other better games looks even better in comparison

the real answer is so then left 4 dead and other better games looks even better in comparison
wat

The models look like they're from 1999.


The models look like they're from 1999.
The character models.

My god.

They look like something from 1999.

All I see is a modded L4D with horrible models, and extreme amounts of ugly particle effects that burn my eyes.

Heck, even the title screen is nearly identical to L4D.

Heck, even the title screen is nearly identical to L4D.
it uses the same engine as stated earlier, but with a default arial font that, on the spot, gives a cheap indie game look

which defines the game

First Gettysburg: Armored Warfare and now this? I don't know why valve lets these games on steam.

I actually feel really bad for this family, they probably put a lot of time and effort into this game only to have it bomb. It would almost be funny if they took all the incoming critisim in stride and produced a comprehensive sequel that was actually fun to play. That's a longshot though.
« Last Edit: May 17, 2012, 01:19:46 AM by Mulch »