This controversial title is a great example of how video games have yet to establish themselves as a medium for storytelling, and this game might change all that.
"The Seattle-based (Washington , the US) indie games publisher Victura and indie games developer Highwire Games, are today very happy and excited to announce that they have just released three new missions for their first-person tactical shooter "Six Days in Fallujah", nearly doubling the content in the game (the new missions is available right now for PC via Steam Early Access)." - Jonas Ek, TGG.
Six Days In Fallujah is a controversial military sim which just hit Early Access. Jump Dash Roll dives into the battlefield to give its first impressions on a possible rival to Call of Duty.
14 years after its original controversy-filled announcement, Six Days in Fallujah has made its way into Early Access. How does this milsim game fare?
Great article. Unforgiving and logical.
It's going to be a long road for this game.
This is a hard one like they've made 100s games on WW2 which is a bit immoral considering the number of people that have died but than again that happened 50 years ago and this game is the samething but soldiers are still dying.
People really b!tch over anything now a days. As long as they don't use the real names of the fallen comrades or the people that fought that battle in general, I really don't see what is so wrong about this game being released.
The gaming industry just won't grow into a bigger medium if they let people limit its potential.
"Laugh and grow fat"
I get the feeling if this was a movie, people would be more open to it.
Video games are still a scary medium to a lot of people and the thought of them being able to present a current event in, hopefully, a mature and meaningful is beyong comprehension.