Instalar Steam
iniciar sesión
|
idioma
简体中文 (chino simplificado)
繁體中文 (chino tradicional)
日本語 (japonés)
한국어 (coreano)
ไทย (tailandés)
Български (búlgaro)
Čeština (checo)
Dansk (danés)
Deutsch (alemán)
English (inglés)
Español de Hispanoamérica
Ελληνικά (griego)
Français (francés)
Italiano
Bahasa Indonesia (indonesio)
Magyar (húngaro)
Nederlands (holandés)
Norsk (noruego)
Polski (polaco)
Português (Portugués de Portugal)
Português-Brasil (portugués de Brasil)
Română (rumano)
Русский (ruso)
Suomi (finés)
Svenska (sueco)
Türkçe (turco)
Tiếng Việt (vietnamita)
Українська (ucraniano)
Comunicar un error de traducción
I took that part of the game for granted: from the get-go you're basically being told that the corp deals in comfortable lies. As far as TTM goes, I do guess that you're supposed to accept that that is considered a good thing.
However, that's my opinion, and I'm not trying to preach. What I'm trying to tell is this: I think the point that you're making right now is one that's going to be discussed in sequels. There's a short minisode starring the doctors in their own workplace. If you don't feel like playing that, here's the thing:
In it, the Sigmund Corp building is facing a mob of protesters, and Eva shows doubt on whether her job is doing 'the right thing'. Both sides are briefly discussed, but nothing groundbreaking, but I think that's Freebird's way of setting up themes that will be shown in later games.