![]() ![]() Still, you need to be aware of your character’s capabilities so you don’t, say, try to plant a C4 charge and blow yourself to hell because you have literally no trap skills. You can pick them up off corpses, of course, and things like weapon proficiency are helpfully abstracted down to melee, light, and heavy. Equipment for your starting loadout is locked by your multiplayer rank, though, so you’ll need to log some hours to get ahold of that sweet, sweet flamethrower or rocket launcher. For each match you can pick one of dozens of specialized characters, or build your own waster to waste people with. The tutorial will even take you into location-based damage, traps, building turrets and barricades, and driving vehicles, all with pretty hilarious scenarios that let you squish raiders and launch them into the stratosphere with heavy explosives.Īll of these abilities are defined by your stats, a comprehensive list of attributes and skills and perks that thankfully stop short of the full Fallout experience. There are a handful of important hotkeys that let you stop moving immediately, crouch for accuracy bonuses (hit percentages are shown when you mouse over targets), and stealth to get the drop on foes. The basics are blessedly simple, left-click to move, shooting is automatic but you can right-click to specify a target, click a weapon to ready or reload it, and so on. The shockingly comprehensive tutorial will spend an hour-plus teaching you all the controls and tricks to start mastering the game, and you might even want to take notes. ![]() ![]() Maps can be played solo with bots but honestly don’t bother if that’s all you’ll do, because gunslinging with your own group of crazies is where the fun is. Obviously don’t show up for the deep lore here, but if co-op and PvP takes on classic real-time RPG combat sound good to you, that’s exactly what you’ll get. Most maps are your motley group against their motley group, blasting through raider camps and holding your own camp against those self-same raiders. There’s no story I can discern here, other than the world mostly ended and everyone that got left behind went all raider crazy. While it may devolve more into chaos than tactics most of the time, it’s a rousing romp on the wilder side of the post-apocalyptic wasteland. That’s what Dustwind’s trying to do with its real-time take on the Fallout Tactics concept (if you remember that relatively black sheep of an already muddled family), and honestly it deserves to succeed where s many others have failed. There are so many dominant multiplayer games out there already, covering every conceivable genre, that hoping to carve out a bit for yourself is a real long-shot. Getting an indie game to take off on Steam is hard enough, but launching a multiplayer-based one is just stacking the entire deck against yourself. ![]()
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