35
Products
reviewed
469
Products
in account

Recent reviews by YouRock379

< 1  2  3  4 >
Showing 1-10 of 35 entries
4 people found this review helpful
139.1 hrs on record (138.2 hrs at review time)
Game is quite fun, but there are a few pretty significant bugs...

In certain situations, and especially with the floating balls that shoot out many pellets when they die for me, one hit will randomly kill you. I'll get hit with one pellet from far away, close up, etc. and will die from full health.

Certain scrolls don't work as intended, like Level 5 Vegan. It will take all of your other weapons and give infinite ammo for a while, but then the infinite ammo effect vanishes and you may be left high and dry.
Posted 27 October, 2024.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
No one has rated this review as helpful yet
2,554.7 hrs on record (368.0 hrs at review time)
The game is fun, but the AI is atrocious. They will often get stuck walking in circles or walking into doors that don't open. Or they will through their grenades/smokes at spawn, then just stare at enemies, but enemy AI is significantly better.
Posted 5 May, 2021.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
No one has rated this review as helpful yet
309.2 hrs on record (259.1 hrs at review time)
It's one of the better games when I want a challenge but to feel a bit accomplished
Posted 10 November, 2019.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
No one has rated this review as helpful yet
1.7 hrs on record (0.2 hrs at review time)
The man who gave everything:
By: YouRock379

There I found myself, starving and thirsty, very near to death. I gathered my pride, stuffed it in my pocket, and asked someone for help. He continued walking, not even looking in my direction, and laughed uncontrollably. Though, to be fair, it looked like he had ♥♥♥♥ his pants. I continued and got the same result countless times. After that didn't work for what felt like the hundredth time, I resorted to digging through trash and even breaking into cars. Hopeless and desperate, I went to someone walking down the middle of the street and said what I thought would be my last words. "Help me," trying to sound as meek and hopeless as I truly was. Expecting him to laugh at me as I died of thirst and starvation at the same time, I was bewildered when I head him say "..Okay". Filled with new hope, I looked up to see my hero! But, alas, just as I glanced at him, he disappeared. All that stood in his place was a burger, a carton of milk, and a bottle of "Teavana." After shedding a couple tears for the man who selflessly gave up everything for me, I devouredthe items faster than I thought humanly possible. They were all delicious.
Then I froze to death.


In all reality, this game is an asset flip that isn't worth the price half off, let alone at the $1 mark. This dev does not care about his work and just looking for as many people as he can get to think "Meh, it's just $0.99."

I got it, seeing the mostly negative comments because I thought $0.49 might get me a laugh or two. I guess it did, so it served it's purpose. Just not well.
Posted 29 June, 2019. Last edited 15 October, 2020.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
No one has rated this review as helpful yet
83.5 hrs on record (21.4 hrs at review time)
Early Access Review
Pretty fun, has some ups and downs. Usually play every once in a while when I feel like relaxing before getting angry again.

To start, you have some basic clothes and $1,000. You can go become a cop (more instantly lucrative), go around robbing people (most difficult), or anything in between.
Posted 29 June, 2019.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
9 people found this review helpful
204.1 hrs on record (7.5 hrs at review time)
Game's fun, but the "re-mars-tered" version is pretty pointless. No significant changes from how it looked on console, and no gameplay/physics updates whatsoever. Still entire structures held up by a single rebar rod, times where a piece of a building will fly off and hit you in the face, etc. Not a bad game though. Glad I got it from Humble Bundle.
Posted 17 June, 2019.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
2 people found this review helpful
247.8 hrs on record (83.5 hrs at review time)
GTA Online is one of the most broken games around now. You can't access vital parts of the clubs/companies if you participate in their community events, certain heists and missions are broken to the point that you can't finish them after putting in 40,000+ and several hours to complete them. Some of these glitches have been around for 2+ years (because when I look them up, Im getting posts about the same glitches from 2017). Rockstar, seriously, fix your game.
Posted 19 May, 2019.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
1 person found this review helpful
0.2 hrs on record
I can't remember where or when I got this game, but I can't really recommend it at the $4 price it's set at. There's no tutorial besides a general one that was google translated to English, so doesn't give too much information. It might be fun or worth it if you get it on sale (at the time of writing this it's on sale for $0.51, so it might be worth it at that price). It's just too bare-bones and hasn't had an update for 2 years.
Posted 16 April, 2019.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
2 people found this review helpful
1,038.1 hrs on record (218.4 hrs at review time)
This game is probably one of my favorite games, and is one I fall back on often when I want to play a game but don't have any specific ones in mind. The combat is very fun. The AI troops have their faults, as they do in any game, but not many. The game overall is not necessarily easy. For the most part, it is difficult from the beginning depending on your starting location. (For instance, if you start with the nordic areas, you will likely run into lots the toughest non-nation alligned troops in the game, while with the Swadian nation, the toughest you'll run into are a few bands of forest bandits.

But let me list this out. So much to touch base one:

Joining a nation: One of the first things you might want to do is align yourself with one of the many nations based on your play style. The Khans are based on horseback archery, the Rhodoks use primarily crossbowmen, Nords have very strong melee troops as well as capable ranged ones, Serranid Sultanate has good skirmishing capabilities (weak in direct combat though), Swadia is pretty good on all fronts, but are expensive, and the Vaegirs are similar, but notably weaker than Swadia at a cheaper cost. It just takes time to find out which troops work best and where.

Combat: You and all your troops (or a proportion which I'll go over in a second) spawn in against all of the enemy troops, starting at your individual spawn points. There are many different maps, so one party might have a disadvantage based on just that. The armies of NPC vassals tend to use a tactic based on their nation. Some stay grouped together, moving 10 or 20 paces at a time until close enough to charge in, etc. Your group will automatically just charge straight in with no rhyme or reason unless you use the function keys along with the numbers to choose different actions for the different groups (Archers, Cavalry, and infantry) as well as groups based on proximity to you, etc. In the settings, you chose the maximum amount of troops allowed on the battlefield at once. If there are more in both the armies than the number you set, each team gets troops proportionate to their army size. If one group has an army of 200 and the other one has 20, it will be 10-1. You can only do 3 waves of respawns for each side, so if you are facing 200 troops and they are only spawning 50 each wave, the combat will end and you will have to start it again. You can also have your army fight without you, though I don't recommend it. You usually lose far more troops than you will if you even spawn in and just stand there doing nothing.

Taking property: If you are a vassal of a nation, any property captured by you goes to the nation, then the property is voted on who gets it. When you besiege a property, either a castle or a city, you must first make ladders to climb the walls, which takes anywhere from a few hours to a couple days based on your party's highest engineering level. After that time has passed, you can attack. To attack, you have to make your way up the ladders while under a constant hail or arrows, bolts, and/or thrown weapons. It's usually not a good idea to be at the front of the line because of this, and also because once you get to the top, your troops will push you into the town defenders which will hack away at you pretty quickly. Some places require you to build a siege device, which is a tower that is pushed that has a ramp on it. Once it is close enough to the enemy base, a drawbridge comes down, allowing your forces to enter. Even once you clear out the main defenders at tthe top of the ladders/end of the draw bridge, the fight is not yet over. You have to go take out the archers and the waves of defenders spawning at the bottom of the other side of the wall. There are often many archers spawning there along with infantrymen that may sneak up on you while you're finishing up the last of the wall archers. If you are knocked out during these fights, your companions carry you away from combat, a certain number of troops from boths sides are incapacitated based on who has the upper hand, and you need to make the seige devices again. After you finally take the castle, there are a couple things. If you initiated the seige, you have to station the garrison there, however if you assist in taking a castle already besieged by your allies, they will automatically station a few dozen troops there to protect it.

Diplomacy: If you find yourself on the bad side of a faction you want to be friendly with, you can talk to them inside of their castles without being attacked youself (unless you are intercepted while transiting to the place) and exchange money for forgiveness. You can also take quests from the various people and complete them for money and to get a better relationship with the person. Better relationships can go a long way. From pursuading them to leave their faction for yours, to being more open to paying back other vassals for their missions, it is adviseable that you get on their good side as much as possible.

Economy- Trading is a relatively easy way to make large amounts of money if you play your cards right. You can hang around the markets for a while and hear what goods currently sell for more at other cities. You can also talk to the mayors of cities you're friendly with as well as ones you control and put in a building such as a Winery or Bakery, and can also choose if the goods made will be sent directly to market (if the good is selling for a lot there) or transfered to the buildings inventory so you can grab it and sell it elsewhere. Keep in mind though, if an enemy takes control of the city that building is in you will not receive money from it until the city is back in friendly hands.

There's a lot more stuff to this game, but I'm too tired to recall it now. I give this game a 9/10, only because there are just a few points that, if addressed, could have made this game perfect. I'd still recommend it all day, even at its every day sale price
Posted 9 December, 2018.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
1 person found this review helpful
3.4 hrs on record (2.6 hrs at review time)
TL:DR Game's good, and given it's brand new, has a lot of room for growth. I'd definitely recommend getting it before the sale ends if you enjoy these types of games.

Can't say anything too bad about this game. Definitely not bad for first day of release. Can get a bit repetitive, but after a couple hours, I can see there is lots of potential (not to say it is bad right now). I personally would have liked a mode where you're just a treasure hunter that can just pay to travel to whatever area you want to search without having to do missions, but I like the progression aspect as well.

How the game plays: As you saw from the trailer, you go around with a metal detector which alerts you when you're in the general area of an item. You can then take it out and find the exact location, after which you dig 3 times to uncover the item. The more rare an item, the more 'prestige' points you get, allowing you to get better metal detectors. There are also story missions which let you get more areas to search (so far I gained access to one additional one, totalling 3 areas). That's about as much as I have on the game now, but it was enjoyable.
Posted 7 December, 2018.
Was this review helpful? Yes No Funny Award
< 1  2  3  4 >
Showing 1-10 of 35 entries