MultiTaskMaster

MultiTaskMaster

I’m always very wary of purchasing indie games. I find they have an alluring appeal, only to disappoint an hour into the game. Multi-Task Master is one of those games with an alluring appeal that can keep those who like being constantly stimulated or with an ADD brain not only occupied, but satisfied. I absolutely love the level of simplicity mixed in with complexity – if that makes sense.

Multi-Task Master is a game where the player must balance their attention between four screens. All four screens have different activities occurring within them, and are all controlled differently from one another. I absolutely love the fact that the tasks are related. In one task, you might be robbing a bank, while trying to keep the hostages calm, while attempting to take out the suspects, while attempting to catch money falling out of the building. In another task, you might be a boxer doing different training regimes all at one time. Another scenario puts you on a factory assembly line. All the scenarios I’ve encountered so far are pretty neat, engaging, and fun. The gameplay delivery on this one is rock solid, straight forward, and original. There are a lot of different scenarios and challenges to go tackle. Each scenario becomes increasingly more difficult and quicker over time. The player is given a certain amount of lives (to make mistakes). Make one too many, and there goes your effort!

Real player with 10.6 hrs in game


Read More: Best Crime Family Friendly Games.


This is a great game that offers something different to the norm. It is super easy to get the hang of, but the escalating difficulty and switching screens soon make it a real brain twister! There is also humor and stories weaved into the gameplay which adds extra depth. There are a lot of levels to unlock, and each one has a different setting so you never know what you are going to get!

Real player with 6.7 hrs in game

MultiTaskMaster on Steam

Zombie Killer Drift - Racing Survival

Zombie Killer Drift - Racing Survival

Remember “Carmageddon”, the racing game where you could also score points by running over every pedestrian that dared to cross your paths? That was fun, right?

Unfortunately, while “Zombie Killer Drift” does scratch the itch of just letting go and mangling zombies with your car, that’s about all it does, and it doesn’t do it well enough to be interesting for long.

It all starts rather innocently. There’s no plot here, and why would there if you can run over zombies with your car? There are 16 levels which more or less all look the same. Some are set at night, others during daytime, but it’s all rather bland. Your car of choice spawns and zombies come running from everywhere. There’s no indicator how many you killed or how many you need to kill - instead, there’s a huge FPS counter on the screen. Why? No idea. Some zombies are tougher than others and have a health bar so you need to hit them several times. Their AI is rather daft so if you knock them far away by hitting them at full speed they often have trouble to find their way back to you and you can start searching for them. Not cool.

Real player with 2.5 hrs in game


Read More: Best Crime Racing Games.


This game has a very interesting drift physics with simple and convenient controls.

I was pleased with a large selection of cool and legendary cars.[/h]

В этой игре очень интересная физика дрифта при простом и удобном управлении.

Порадовал большой выбор крутых и легендарных автомобилей.

Real player with 2.4 hrs in game

Zombie Killer Drift - Racing Survival on Steam

Saints Row: The Third

Saints Row: The Third

Haha Penis Sword

Real player with 82.7 hrs in game


Read More: Best Crime Great Soundtrack Games.


GTA but fun =3

Real player with 74.7 hrs in game

Saints Row: The Third on Steam

Traurig Secrets: Prologue

Traurig Secrets: Prologue

Fair artwork, enough content for the price, interesting enough characters. It didn’t blow me away, but for $2 it’s worth the money. It’s got some interesting tidbits. Little choices here and there that don’t seem to impact the story (the bigger ones do) but you sort of wonder, is it being kept track of and will it come into play later?

It’s also got some interesting elements that sort of hint at later puzzles or mysteries or lore. I could definately see it leading somewhere interesting in further installments. The product is similar in feel to the demo (the first quarterish is the demo) but more and deeper content so if the demo was interesting, this is more of the same.

Real player with 4.8 hrs in game

This is an entirely incomplete VN and should be listed as an early release. The story starts in color and then suddenly changes to B&W sketches. Took less than a half hour to play through what little content there is here.

Real player with 0.6 hrs in game

Traurig Secrets: Prologue on Steam