
When I figured out the jellyfish thing or the quantum stones place, I was smirking like a madman for 5 minutes straight.

I've only fully explored Giant's Deep so far, but it blew my fucking mind. There have been many occassions where I was left with my mouth open and my eyes watering, filled with wonder and awe. Both do themes of exploration excellently, but Outer Wilds just does it magnitutes better and adds a whole air of mystery and storytelling into the mix.
#Unbound worlds apart prologue plus
If you were on the fence about it, but you wishlisted it because you heard great things, plus you want to satiate that exploration angle, I guarantee you this is a must play and a one of a kind experience. Started up Outer Wilds, and just a few hours later I can conclude that this game is legit one of the greatest I've ever played. I saw some of the Tales game(s) 85% reduced, always wanted to check one of those out. Some offers seem quite nice though on first look - e.g. And it's always possible to play on one of the lower difficulties if it gets too the sale: I'm still thinking about some stuff, but because I was traveling I didn't have time to check in detail, yet. Great game with a great story, and the combat was ok (even though as said not up my alley).

That's part of why I love the isometric turn-based games so much, I can plan and don't need twitchy reflexes.Īt some point during the next week I may try to dive deep into Steam's catalog and see if there's some things I would have never considered that look interesting.As someone who's realizing that I get slower and slower in video games, and always having preferred slower, tactical, turn-based games anyway, I can still only recommend Horizon: Zero Dawn.

Both of these, though, I have to really think about because as I've aged my ability to fight bosses in a 3D environment has degraded. Outside of that style of RPG, I'm thinking about Horizon Zero Dawn and Cyberpunk 2077.
