![]() Jen Nier: Automata helps young woman overcome depression, but no one wants to talk to her about it I mean I never said I slept with them – I actually just talked a lot about the game and recommended it: high sales mean more Taro games. I think I got down to 22 guys when I quit. I used to roam around Tinder getting guys to buy Nier: Automata and then ignored them afterward. What did the woman do? In a tweet, the woman who introduces Kotaku as Jen says (via twitter): There is even praise for this from Yoko Taro, the mastermind of the game. So much so that I would caution Switch players to wait for more patches or even start a new playthrough on PC.The US site Kotaku reports on a 21-year-old woman who found an unusual topic of conversation on the Tinder dating platform: the 2017 Japanese action role-playing game Nier: Automata (PS4, PC, Switch). ![]() It’s clear that the game was designed for consoles, especially when taking those difficulty spikes into account, but these performance issues really detract from the experience. You’ll very rarely see 60 or even 30 fps in these new areas, and the game will frequently crash after cutscenes. While performance has been fixed with some patches since I first reviewed the game, the new areas tax the HTML-5 coded game to its absolute limits and the Switch just can’t keep up. Getting to those new scenes can lead to even more frustration, however. If you fell in love with these characters like I did, the frustrating difficulty here is well worth getting to see Emilie and Apollo one more time. There are a ton of small character moments, surprisingly in the final dungeon as well as it has some non-instanced outdoor areas, that are just a delight. Multiple characters return and can even be added to your party, but my favorite moments were simply getting to hang out with the First Scholars and friends again. Without spoiling anything, A New Home feels like one last hurrah as it sets up for a sequel. This left me feeling pretty mixed about the new content in the DLC, leaning towards the negative in terms of combat, but thankfully the story makes up for it. The several minibosses you encounter here are much more fun to fight and make interesting use of the elemental powers as well as the dungeon specific mechanics. Even with received damage turned all the way down I still got my butt handed to me by the temple’s boss because some of the attacks simply don’t feel avoidable. Even the accessibility options don’t help with some of these puzzles as they still require inhumanly precise timing. It only gets harder from here too, and while the raid provides a tough but fair challenge I found the final dungeon, Ku’lero Temple, to be simply unreasonable at times. The first new area, the Azure Archipelago, has some super tough enemies throughout that can kill you very quickly as you grind up to their level. You’ll definitely need those bonuses too, because the new content here is incredibly difficult, even when compared to the base game. It’s a nice reward and allows you to continue using some bonuses you prefer like increased speed or regenerating HP. Luckily, you’ll only have to do this once for each slot as there is a new type of gear that will always scale to your level called Ascended Gear. The game expects you to have top tier equipment from the post-game, so you might have to grind for trading materials before you actually continue the story. ![]() For those who’ve already enjoyed the base game, this is simply more of that, albeit with a big caveat for more casual players. The expansion adds several new chapters to the game allowing you to explore a new area, finish the final dungeon of CrossWorld’s main story, and return to Vermillion Wasteland for a short epilogue. While the original ending wrapped up most of the story, this DLC seeks to tie up all the loose ends like how Luke deals with becoming an AI, the identity of C’Tron, and best of all: finally finishing the Raid. Lea and Lukas’ Evotar clone (who changes his name to Luke to avoid confusion) are brought back into the game to start their new lives, with potential new jobs to help players. Instatainment has built them a new area in the game to live and relax in: Homestedt. Be aware that this review will contain spoilers for the base game.Ī New Home takes place a few months after Lea foiled Sidwell’s plans and secured a future for her fellow AI Evotars. While that expansion, A New Home, released on PC earlier this year it’s finally come to consoles. Literally – after beating the big bad and saying goodbye to your friends, you’re taken to a blocked off path and told to wait for the DLC. The base game took advantage of this with the plot’s many twists and turns, but the ending stopped just short of being a satisfying cap on the experience. CrossCode holds a lot of promise as a game set inside a game.
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