Posted on: November 1, 2020

serioussam1212
Verified ownerGames: 36 Reviews: 1
Retrospective from a serious fan.
With my real name being Sam, I enthusiastically adopted the 'Serious' title for myself back in 2002, after falling in love with TFE & TSE. That should give some indication of my love for this IP. I just finished playing SS4, and it left me feeling considerably disappointed. First, I just have to say how disappointed I am in the modern engine. I could not even play the game on day 1 because it would crash to desktop on start-up, and I couldn't play it for 4-5 days until it was patched. What bigger fail can a game have at launch than be unplayable? None. When it finally did launch, the engine was very unstable even for my insane gaming PC. The graphics were constantly glitching, and the game would crash at least once per session. Major fail points here when TFE and TSE had one of the most efficient and reliable engines of the early 2000's. Next, I don't play Serious Sam to run up and down modern city streets, scrounging for ammo. What really made the original games so enjoyable to me was the exploration and fictional arcade feel of running through pristine historical environments, while picking up giant floating stacks of ammo and mowing down thousands of alien invaders. The number of enemies here in SS4 felt like much less, and while they did integrate some historical environments, they were all modern ruins, and it's just not the same. There's so many fun historical time periods that would be fun to explore in the SS universe that I wish they'd kept doing that with the series instead of this modern urban warfare nonsense. Last, the good. The guns are super fun, it was nice to the see the Thompson SMG return, and I enjoyed the little skill tree. The SS soundtrack is one of the best ever, and I LOVED hearing the return of Corridor of Death. Ultimately, this could've been a great SS game, but it missed too many marks for me. There were parts that felt like the good old days, but they were few. I hope Croteam finds and considers constructive feedback.
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