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Superhot pc review
Superhot pc review






superhot pc review

You also miss those tasty snippets of scene-setting from the original. But after an hour of Mind Control Delete, I’d seen the same dojos, garages and penthouse suites ten times over. Superhot’s campaign was short enough that you never spent too long in one place, either. Every fight, by necessity, is a moderately-sized brawl in a fairly-spacious arena where foes come from all directions. There’s no punching your way out of a packed elevator here. Outside of those small Hack and Core tutorials, you’re also missing the original’s more deliberate fights. The absolute minimalism of the visuals helps the arenas melt into the background, and all those traits and twists help spice up individual skirmishes, but you are very much still fighting the same assortment of blokes on the same round of maps. See, Mind Control Delete can be bloody repetitive. The text sections create a haunting atmosphere, even if they are thin on actual plot, but the desire to see more kept me going even as the repetition set in.

superhot pc review

You’re always diving deeper into the machine, whether that’s to dig out more cryptic text or another handy upgrade.

#Superhot pc review full

Superhot’s glitched-out story about control, conspiracies and illegal ROMs returns, providing a narrative structure that keeps MCD from going full Spelunky. They still run and gun blindly at you as before, but you soon encounter foes who’s weapons can’t be stolen, and porcelain gits who can only be damaged by hitting their glowing red weak point. To keep things fair, Mind Control Delete starts remixing how its baddies work.








Superhot pc review