Welcome To… Chichester 2 - Part III : NightFall

Welcome To… Chichester 2 - Part III : NightFall

This visual novel is the last in the Welcome To… Chichester 2 trilogy, and the penultimate episode. Playing the previous episode would be beneficial.

The Story

For a short while after the events of No Regrets For The Future, life returned to normality for the protagonist and Grendel Jinx. However, with William making an unwanted return from the Happy Glowstick Funtime Re-education Camp, everything starts becoming more complicated for Grendel as she has to contend with final school exams, her parents divorcing, and an unwanted new stepsister.

The protagonist is naturally dragged into these affairs as he/she has to contend with an assassination attempt by Grendel’s father, being abducted by Grendel’s mother, an increasingly hostile (to The Council Of The Unseen) secretary and a debauched boss, culminating in the protagonist being forced to destroy The Council Of The Unseen, by using their own weapons against them.

Spanning five years from the end of No Regrets to the start of The Spy Of America And The Long Vacation, this episode concludes the main prequel arc - with a bang

Features :

  • 11 bad endings and one true ending

  • Multiple routes

  • 100,000+ word story, with an estimated play time of 6 - 8 hours. Complete the game, and subsequent playthroughs will extend the story by around 2 to 3 hours, with extra detail for certain events.

  • Option to display current route (and choice)

  • Visual impairment modes as well (font change, font size and so on)


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Welcome To... Chichester 2 - Part III : NightFall on Steam

Rock of Ages 2: Bigger & Boulder™

Rock of Ages 2: Bigger & Boulder™

Have you ever found yourself playing bowling and thought to yourself: “gosh, this is fun and all, but what if my goal was to avoid the pins instead of knocking them over, and the pins were placed by my enemies for some reason”. Well, do I have the perfect game for you! Rock of Ages 2 is a game where you play as a famous character from history, commanding your mighty boulders to smash down your opponent’s front door and crush him with your turgid rock. If Monty Python, bowling and a real-time strategy had a threesome and made a baby, Rock of Ages 1 would be the result, while Rock of Ages 2 is more of the same, just more of it and more balanced.

Real player with 29.0 hrs in game


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My review after the first playthorugh on Normal difficulty:

I’m a huge fan of this idea and loved the first game!

But this game feels quite different compared to the first one, but not in a bad way.

Here is why!

1st: You are way faster!

This means that corners are really annoying and in most maps best chokepoint to bring your enemy to a hold.

But it also means that avoiding obstacle of your opponment often is a bad choice.

Simply because you gain so much speed in such a few seconds that it doesn’t matter that you crush through 2-4 layers of walls before. Also it is more beneficial to destroy the obstacle for your further runs, so just ram through nearly everything in your path(exept animals, they will stop you)

Real player with 14.5 hrs in game

Rock of Ages 2: Bigger & Boulder™ on Steam

Battlefield V

Battlefield V

Compared to other FPS this is a really fun game. It feels immersive to the sounds of the injured and dying calling out for medics, the historical accuracy of some of the maps (Iwo Jima), and the tanks/weapons/uniforms ect.

This is not worth buying though, even if it is 5$ or free because of the massive unchecked hacking in the game. Every match has at least one cheater on average, there are no hardware bans, vote kicks, and reporting is very difficult and ineffective. You will be spawn killed by a edgy teenager with a machine gun 300 meters away headshots and you and 31 others on your team will die in 15 seconds, over and over, until you find a new match and repeat.

Real player with 226.4 hrs in game


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Starts out fun t’ill you get a cheater in a game. Maybe you should join a new! Nope. Cheaters in every game… this is really sad just dont buy this i was dumd buying it for 5$ still isnt worth it. The fact that you cant kick the cheaters like in tf2 is really dumd. End up in a cycle playing for 10mins then get headshotted throught a wall and seeing the person snaping all over the place. Wouldn’t recommend.

Real player with 67.0 hrs in game

Battlefield V on Steam

Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor - Prophecy

Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor - Prophecy

-Some spoilers ahead-

Fabius Bile shows up, and I thoroughly appreciate that decision on the part of the Developers. I’d voiced some concerns early on that your player character always seemed as though he could duel Khorne and come out the victor, but the inclusion of characters like Fabius Bile helps to give the player character some realism.

Typhus, Luscious Lucius the Eternal, Miniature Angron, and Ahzek Ahriman are four major Champions for their respective Chaos Gods, these are four extremely famous and powerful characters, and Bile is often mentioned alongside them. The fact that, should you manage to beat Fabius Bile in a fight, you’ll only really be defeating a clone makes for an amazing, reusable character for the game. He’s an extremely powerful lore character, with real motivation and relevance to the story.

Real player with 94.6 hrs in game

Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor – Prophecy Standalone Review

The Search for more continues…

Please note that this Review may contain spoilers from the Original game

Some key points that this Standalone Expansion offers:

  1. New Playable Class

  2. New Campaign

  3. New Settings

  4. New Enemy Races

Standalone:

W40K Inquisitor Martyr left us with a hefty cliff-hanger… An Uber powerful warrior, age old conspiracies mixed in with so much secrecy… An Inquisitor’s dream job to depict!

Now it’s back continuing that story and with it comes some new goodies and features. A new 2.0 rule set along with a variety of other mechanics that have joined the Prophecy. You do not need to own Martyr to play Prophecy, but if you do, your character progression will be carried over to Prophecy and you can pick up where you left off.

Real player with 77.4 hrs in game

Warhammer 40,000: Inquisitor - Prophecy on Steam

Need for Speed™ Heat

Need for Speed™ Heat

It’s hard to not recommend this. It is.

On the one hand, the game looks, feels, and handles brilliantly. It’s creative and fun with great customization options and it was something that I, someone who never enjoyed racing games, genuinely enjoyed and keep finding myself returning to.

Despite the game’s fundamental greatness, it suffers terribly from a lack of content. It’s a game that got virtually no support after its initial release, and it shows. The campaign is anemic, high-end races are lacking, and the game has little to offer beyond just racing and doing tracks, except with occasional dialogue.

Real player with 69.5 hrs in game

Well, this could easily be the best NFS game I played since the glory days of Underground 2 / Most Wanted 2005 / Carbon … here’s why:

  • the visual style at night reminds me of Underground 2, so bonus points for nostalgia here

  • gameplay is quite well-made, game itself isn’t that hard, but still way more challenging than some of its predecessors (especially when playing against high-tier racers and cops)

  • cops are smarter than in most of the previous NFS installments, and also pretty aggressive

Real player with 58.9 hrs in game

Need for Speed™ Heat on Steam