I dont reccomend this game, even considering lower price with discount. Story, cinematics, voice acting is extremly bad. Problem is, the missions are so repetetive, you probably wouldnt want to play this game over and over again. Rogue-like mechanics in the single player mode is supposed to be one the selling points of this game. I dont understand why cant you play story campaign in CO-OP. Even in multiplayer, you play CO-OP against these dumb AI enemies, which is not very entertaining. It feels like youre shooting some zombies with guns. Playing campaign with dumb bots as your teammates is really painful. There is a stealth mechanics but no matter what you do, it ends like a shootout. There is a This was supposed to be one of those dumb fun games but it turned into a cringefest. Just get ready to die, try and die again until you take the throne. Crime Boss: Rockay City is a pleasant surprise considering all of the aspects that make its foundations usually crumble from the weight. This was supposed to be one of those dumb fun games but it turned into a cringefest. This game is great, with minimal or no negatives. Take on the role of Travis Baker - a man with his sights set on becoming the new King of Rockay City, one crime at a time. Crime Boss: Rockay City is an organized crime game combining first-person shooter action and turf wars, playable solo or with friends. Choose your crew based on their skills and expertise, and execute daring missions with the hopes of walking away with the cash, the turf and, ultimately, the crown. Crime Boss: Rockay Citys heist gameplay is squandered by a myriad of bugs, mindless, boring gameplay, and a severe lack of fun despite its best attempts to. After the demise of the previous crime boss, there's an open vacancy for a new King of Rockay City - but it isn't just you who is fighting for the throne. But beyond the glamour, there is a fierce turf war raging on. A thriving metropolis with excitement buzzing from the sandy bay to the towering skyscrapers. After the demise of the previous crime boss, there's an open vacancy for a new King of Rockay City - but it isn't just Rockay City. But beyond the glamour, there is a fierce turf war raging on. I spent some time with Crime Boss: Rockay City, the upcoming Payday-esque heist FPS that sees you tackle crime and murder in either singleplayer or co-op, all with nostalgia hits from characters played by Michael Madsen and Vanilla Ice. In its current state, Crime Boss: Rockay City feels like a low-level wannabe criminal trying to get rich quick on a street populated with multiplayer shooters who already do better. However, using a voice cast of Hollywood talent past their prime is a choice that doesn’t add anything to the game, and it’s not enough to distract me from the shallow gameplay that was already done much better ten years ago. There are good ideas buried deep within this game, and the roguelike/Payday combination is a genuinely novel concept I’d love to see explored in a project with more focus. Read the full review.Ĭrime Boss Rockay City is a cautionary tale for how to effectively budget a video game, and a prime example of how games need to feel and play well first and foremost. Instead, it pushes me further and further away, leaving me with no desire to ever return to Rockay City. At its best, Crime Boss functions – I can shoot weapons at enemies, empty bank vaults and warehouses for loot, watch cutscenes with recognizable faces and voices, and grow my empire – but it never captures my attention in a meaningful or memorable way. When run-ending bugs appear, Crime Boss is miserable, but even when I’m running a mission bug-free, I lay witness to a painfully dull take on organized crime. In fact, it’s a reminder that a celebrity cast does nothing for a game when it’s void of anything interesting or fun to support it. Crime Boss: Rockay City from upstart developer Ingame Studios tries to emulate those moments with the vibe of a ’90s action flick, but the game itself is an example of an operation going. As for the console launch, we’ll have to see if some miracle takes place before it launches.Ĭrime Boss: Rockay City is proof that star power isn’t everything. So should you skip Crime Boss: Rockay City? Seems likely. Still, the fewer reviews for Crime Boss: Rockay City hasn’t helped the general rating for the game at 49%. Keep in mind that Publisher 505 Games clearly wanted this game to launch without any sort of media buzz hence there only being 12 reviews on Metacritic at the time. Reviews sit anywhere between 30% on Game Informer to 60% on Attack of The Fanboy. On Metacritic, Crime Boss: Rockay City is sitting on 49% with a 5.6 user score.
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