


Combats are very similar and predictable (100% hit rate, hidden characters waiting to pick off each monster with its known HP) once you get the hang of it offers quite limited challenge even on higher difficulties. Characters are alright and quite funny with good dialogue.

Don’t buy this, and don’t accept companies blatantly not giving a f*** about their customers :-( Graphics and customer experience aside, from the 3h gameplay I managed to put in (awaiting the 1-day patch), the game is quite linear, and it nowhere near feels like it has any exploration. Neither Nintendo nor Funcom has accepted refunds. The price was high (SEK 449, or EUR 45) and I really feel robbed of the money. The worst is that I bought the game from the Nintendo eStore based on screenshots that later were found out to be from the PC game, looking much crisper. The 1-day “graphics fix” patch didn’t do anything for hand-held (and frankly I’m not sure if it did in docked either). Download versions of packaged software Mutant Year Zero: Road to Eden Deluxe Edition Nintendo Switch R699. It is VERY blurry, it stutters badly, it is slow. It’s worth trying for a spot on the leaderboards (and possibly making yourself into an in-game NPC).Game is totally unplayable in hand-held mode (also look 20 year old in docked), the port has to be one of the worst ever made and totally Game is totally unplayable in hand-held mode (also look 20 year old in docked), the port has to be one of the worst ever made and totally ruins the game-and the franchise for us that looked forward to playing it on Switch. All characters and mutations are available from the outset, and performing special actions will earn score multipliers and bonuses.

It’s a challenge mode of sorts where players take on existing maps with new enemy types. Those who currently own the game and want a reason to replay it can check out the Stalker Trials. It’s unknown whether the demo will also be coming to PS4 and Xbox One players. To check out the demo, simply click on the tab on the right-hand side of the Steam page. Requiring a 3 GB download, the demo includes “all the content from the beginning of the game” leading up to the Ark, as per Funcom. How else would you describe an XCOM-style game with exploration and an anthropomorphic duck? If you haven’t tried it and want to know what the fuss is about, then the developer has recently released a free demo on Steam. The Bearded Ladies’ Mutant Year Zero: Road to Eden was an interesting take on the post-apocalyptic, tactical strategy genre when it first released.
