n0face wrote:
Blocks100 wrote:To answer the question in this threads title, I intend to play as a dirty cop. But do I also have the option to play as a: Good Cop/Bad Cop or Doughnut Eating Cop? What I am trying to say is, just exactly how many cop classes are there in this game?
This doesn’t have controller support at the moment (at least that’s what the internet thinks).Louiecat wrote:Only thing putting me off is the pc interface. But I can hook it up to the tv and veg on the sofa I suppose.
Kow wrote:Rpg with controller is as bad as a fighter on keyboard and mouse.
Lovely reviewSilke wrote:Now that it's done - what a beautiful, unreservedly human game this was. And if you permit me to overthink it a bit, it's interesting how well Disco Elysium's release coincides with Peter Handke getting the Nobel Prize. Because this, just as Handke's literature, is so much about capturing the moment and acting upon it. How no thought, impulse or feeling ever can be waved off as too extraneous, since there's always the possibility that it will be the one to take you somewhere new. Somewhere really important. So, after a drinking deluge of epic memory shattering proportions - which works as a catalyst, a turning point, basically a chance to be born again - you wake up on the shit and cum stained floor and get to re-experience everything life has to offer without having to adhere to prior obligations or moral views of right and wrong. Free to finally find the truth about yourself. I loved giving myself over to it completely.
Silke wrote:Now that it's done - what a beautiful, unreservedly human game this was. And if you permit me to overthink it a bit, it's interesting how well Disco Elysium's release coincides with Peter Handke getting the Nobel Prize. Because this, just as Handke's literature, is so much about capturing the moment and acting upon it. How no thought, impulse or feeling ever can be waved off as too extraneous, since there's always the possibility that it will be the one to take you somewhere new. Somewhere really important. So, after a drinking deluge of epic memory shattering proportions - which works as a catalyst, a turning point, basically a chance to be born again - you wake up on the shit and cum stained floor and get to re-experience everything life has to offer without having to adhere to prior obligations or moral views of right and wrong. Free to finally find the truth about yourself. I loved giving myself over to it completely.
Dogfingers wrote:This is definitely my favourite game of the year, it will likely be in my top 5 of the decade. It's fucking magnificent, not without flaws, but is something who you could unashamedly present to someone who knows nothing about games and they would be intrigued.
Silke wrote:Now that it's done - what a beautiful, unreservedly human game this was.
And if you permit me to overthink it a bit, it's interesting how well Disco Elysium's release coincides with Peter Handke getting the Nobel Prize. Because this, just as Handke's literature, is so much about capturing the moment and acting upon it. How no thought, impulse or feeling ever can be waved off as too extraneous, since there's always the possibility that it will be the one to take you somewhere new. Somewhere really important.
So, after a drinking deluge of epic memory shattering proportions - which works as a catalyst, a turning point, basically a chance to be born again - you wake up on the shit and cum stained floor and get to re-experience everything life has to offer without having to adhere to prior obligations or moral views of right and wrong. Free to finally find the truth about yourself.
I loved giving myself over to it completely.
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