A Way Out
A Way Out is not really a serious and emotional tale of convicts who sometimes escape from prison, but extreme color shifts and excellent fantasies kill almost any emotion or tension in the game.
Like another game by director Joseph Fares, a tale about two boys, A Way Out has two game heroes who are testing the story of the game. You will need a friend to play with this time. A Way Out game can only be played in collaboration, it will always play in a split screen moving dynamically between private views.
Sometimes the screen is split vertically and sometimes horizontally. Sometimes evenly, sometimes uneven. Sometimes does not happen at all, or split the TV into three to dedicate real estate also to PC users.
Exploreable small environments in A Way Out often contain multiple chat characters, but if you and your friend are involved in different conversations at the same time, the game has no better answer than playing the audio in parallel, meaning you're struggling to hear any of the conversations in front of you. To ease the problem, run the translation, because each side of the screen has its own set, but the interlace audio distracts attention.
I enjoyed my trip with my friend. We had to look for each other while escaping from jail, working together to solve puzzles, and save each other's lives on multiple occasions. Our characters may not be near each other, but the coercive A Way Out cooperative is worth it.
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Studio Hazelight
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Action / Adventure Genre
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Origin platform, PS4, Xbox One
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Release date 23/03/2018
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A Way Out
Reviewed by AT-Professional Gaming
on
July 02, 2018
Rating: