

DUSTWIND ON STEAM DOWNLOAD
Now let the download begin and wait for it to finish.
DUSTWIND ON STEAM INSTALL
In DUSTWIND you will have a ton of CLUSTERFUN around every turn! How to Download & Install Dustwind No matter if you prefer to be a lone-wolf, want to play in a team against other human enemies, or cooperative against the ruthless A.I. Collect weapons and gear, develop your character based on your gameplay preferences, and become a leading figure in these dark times! A great variety of exciting game modes awaits you. When you don’t act carefully, tactical and clever, you won’t stand a chance! During this adventure, it will occur to you that not only your own fate is on the stake but much more…The long-awaited story campaign contains 16 missions with a playing time of around 10 hours and tells an emotional story. Without your memory and hopelessly outnumbered you go on your crusade, fighting your way to your tormentors to take revenge. These are hard times in the wasteland! In this POST-APOCALYPTIC EXTRAVAGANZA, you have to make quick tactical decisions if you want to survive! You are the nameless heroine! A vicious assault in the wasteland has hit you hard.
DUSTWIND ON STEAM PC
I suppose things may improve with patches down the line, but for now, I’d say check it out on PC if you want to get a better experience.After the apocalypse… The civilization like we know has come to an end and the few survivors have to fight each other. The potential is the best thing I could probably say about Dustwind. It was pretty embarrassing to play it on PS5 when you consider what it is capable of. It’s fairly apparent that it’s a PC game, ported rather badly over to console with minimal effort put towards the controls or power of those consoles to enhance the visuals. There might actually be a good game here if it were not for the performance issues. Jerky, janky, with a poor frame rate – Dustwind is supposedly next-gen optimised. And that’s when nothing is moving, as when something does begin to exhibit a motion, it’s really not good at all. This particular example is so prominent because the visuals are awful. The control scheme is baffling, even after a number of hours with it, I could not get my head around why I was pushing the buttons I was pushing to do certain things (like holding a button to highlight everything I can interact with, then having to go and find that needle in the visual haystack). It has everything.Īnd maybe that would be perfect if the game was fun to play. You’re then earning XP to level up, and searching bodies to find guns, using stealth to approach and sneak up on enemies, investigating objects. It also has melee and ranged attacks, and combat can feel a bit Diablo-like if you play it as such. For example, the shooting mechanic has a Fallout-style limb targeting mechanic. It almost feels like two different games were developed and then shoehorned together. The missions are very specific about what you need to do, and the story doesn’t always clearly match what you’re doing.

The mechanics you have learned also now need to adjoin to an RPG progression system and a story, set in post-apocalyptic times.

The campaign though is an exercise in frustration. There are a number of modes, such as Team Deathmatch, and a capture-the-flag type mode (6 in total) which serve as a real opportunity to experience the core combat mechanic before delving into the campaign. You have Skirmish mode – you and your team of 3 other mercenaries try and kill the enemy. Once that’s all over, the real game reveals itself. The tutorial takes you through gameplay elements in short missions, where you learn to equip weapons, kill things, search bodies for new things, stealth about, and suchlike. So what is Dustwind? Well, it’s an isometric action-adventure game. It doesn’t reveal exactly what type of game it is until you get into it a bit, and at that point, you become aware that it’s not building to a crescendo of excellence that you were hoping for. Dustwind: The Last Resort is a bit of a tease.
