Posted on: December 4, 2023

Mishanskee
Games: 57 Reviews: 2
Amazing game
Whole game about killing ru**ians. Isn't that great?
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Last Train Home © 2023 THQ Nordic AB, Sweden. Published by THQ Nordic GmbH, Austria. Developed by Ashborne Games s.r.o.. All other trademarks, logos and copyrights are property of their respective owners. All rights reserved.
This game features violent content
This game features violent content
Game length provided by HowLongToBeat
Posted on: December 4, 2023
Mishanskee
Games: 57 Reviews: 2
Amazing game
Whole game about killing ru**ians. Isn't that great?
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Posted on: February 4, 2024
Lawgun
Games: 144 Reviews: 2
Saints in a Hell...
How to make a historic game a pure fantasy? Just make one side of the conflict ridiculous moralists which are still killing and stealing but prefer to pretend to be all noble. Such historic events should be based on a storyline full of grey morale with personal drama elements. Just another propaganda within of a global agenda but in a form of video game. Can't wait to see a game from czechs about how Great Britain gave away Czechoslovakia to fascist Germany to empower it with czech industry for a future war against USSR. Oh wait, it's not within of agenda, sad.
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Posted on: November 30, 2023
Thar
Games: 235 Reviews: 15
Another attempt at revisionism
Setting the score to 1 star because otherwise GOG won't allow my review. The modern trend of rewriting history that doesn't conform to today's sensibilities is getting really tiring. Yes, up until very recently, war was considered to be men's job, with women serving only in auxillary roles. Games and movies still want to use history as dramatic background, but want to erase what they consider unpleasant. Well, at this point it's no longer history, it's fantasy. There is, of course, nothing wrong with fantasy, but media such as "Last train home" are still advertised as reasonably accurate. Even large and obvious inaccuracies aren't openly stated, so even if people realize that the story itself is fictional, they still take the portrayal as real - and it's hard to blame them for believing so. So let's state the facts. According to very thorough research [1], there were probably around 200 women serving with the Czechoslovak Legion, out of it's 50 thousand members overall in Russia. Out of these 200, vast majority was serving as hospital staff. Of the remainder, vast majority was serving in other noncombat roles. Of all the legionary women, the research names only two that maybe, probably served in roles involved combat. For the sake of argument, let's assume the real number is 20, that's 0,0004% of all legionaries. A number that is well below statistical error. [1] https://ius.bg.ac.rs/wp-content/uploads/2021/09/Nov%C3%A1k-Jakub-Women-of-the-legion-unrecognised-members-of-the-first-Czechoslovak-army.pdf
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