![]() And this isn’t by accident, as the game has a ton of text to dig into for lore hunters, enough to rival games three times its size. The quality of Brigador’s writing is well above many triple-A titles, let alone most indie games, offering up a world that’s far better realized than one would expect. If all you want is to pilot a giant robot and blow things up, Brigador doesn’t want to get in your way.īut you’ll probably want it to. Story is doled out through these parcels, which can be purchased using in-game currency won by successfully completing missions, which allows players to access only as much background content as they want to. Instead, the game opts for something between the Dark Souls drip-feed delivery method and a codex-style backstory presentation. There isn’t much in the way of story in terms of what’s presented up front. But circumstances are definitely not quite as cut and dried as they sound. ![]() Developers Stellar Jockeys and Gausswerks have crafted an undeniably cool game, which anyone who’d seen the exciting and stylish trailers heralding its release might have guessed, but does the final product live up to the initial promise?Īt its core, Brigador sets out to give players the chance to control a surprisingly vast roster of mechs, tanks, and anti-grav vehicles, outfit them with a diverse array of mechanically interesting weapons, and send them out to a colony world to terrorize the remnants of a regime that’s just lost its dictatorial (and aptly named) Great Leader. Everything bleeds gritty, low sci-fi atmosphere with cyberpunk undertones, from the overall themes of the story and world, to the art, music, and text. Right from the start, Brigador oozes style and atmosphere.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |