You just jump in a wide range of planes, fly around, demolish bad guys, and do it in style. This isn’t a flight sim with realistic physics. But at the same time, none of that harms Project Wingman, for what it is, it’s well done. I would say the game scales a bit easy, though the harder difficulties will give fans of the genre a real challenge. There don’t appear to be checkpoints in the missions and these missions are decently long. The story isn’t great, but then again neither is Ace Combat in general. Project Wingman looks Gorgeous and controls well, there’s also VR support but I didn’t have a chance to try that out yet. I’ve played now for four hours total and it’s a great game. I found out this was a game made by three developers and was a Kickstarter but I actually couldn’t tell either of those things. As a fan of that series, this gives all the same thrills, and it does it so well. It is Ace Combat, and there’s nothing wrong with that. Project Wingman is an arcade flight game where you shoot down enemies and take on large-scale missions. An indie Ace Combat that can hold its own. Though I will say that, how the devs advertise DLC for the game in the shop of the actual game is kind of gaudy, and there’s a lot of DLC here, like 40 bucks worth. There are a few minor bugs and issues here, but overall, they shouldn’t get in the way. This reminds me of Train Station Renovation, a game I enjoyed a lot, but I would say House Flipper is the better of the two. Pick this up if you want a fun relaxed sim. It’s the fun of renovation without the absolute horror of it. You can quickly add a new sink to the wall with a few button presses, but that’s also what works here. Almost nothing takes more than a couple of seconds to pull off. House Flipper is admittedly shallow though, this isn’t a deep construction simulator, it’s just a fun game where there are multiple different jobs such as cleaning up messes, replacing bad appliances, and more. It’s a simple idea to start with, but then you earn enough money to buy a house and this game gets going. At the beginning of the game you do small jobs for various people, everything from repainting a room to removing a wall and replacing it. House Flipper is a simple concept, you buy a house, do some construction and then sell it for massive money, and that’s the core of the game. 35k for a house? So we’re not going for realism. I do wish them the best, this deserves a bigger audience and going up against an absolute giant. Normally multiplayer is a no-go for me, but I was surprised at how solid this game was and enjoyed myself. It is multiplayer and that doesn’t diminish the fact that the player base might dry up, but I would also recommend getting together with up to four additional friends and joining as a group, I expect you will have a good time. Pick this up if you like tactical shooters. While the player base is weaker, the team I found was extremely welcoming and understanding of how new I was, and it was a very positive experience. The gameplay all works together to the point you’ll be sitting and listening for the enemies’ approach and then reacting to their attacks. The tools for the tactics are well made, including a map that allows quick and easy strategic decisions. The tilesets are great as well, I particularly like the Arena. Maps are randomized, so you constantly have to plan new approaches. Once you play Due Process though, everything just works together. The art here is good, but it’s clear this is made by a smaller team, which it was. Due Process is an Early Access, multiplayer-only tactical shooter very similar to Rainbow Six.
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