5 votes

Pacific Drive | Gameplay trailer

2 comments

  1. [2]
    Douglas
    Link
    Neat, I'll keep an eye on it! The Forest is my favorite open-world/survival/crafting game of all time because, unlike Minecraft and others like it-- it has an end-goal/there's an ending. I can't...

    You'll face supernatural dangers on expeditions out into the Olympic Exclusion Zone. Make your base of operations in an abandoned garage, where you’ll research new parts, customize your station wagon, and chart routes deeper into the Zone. As you learn to survive the hostile, vicious environment you'll discover experimental remnants that all point to one bigger mystery - what happened here? Hit the gas, dodge the anomalies, and find out.

    Neat, I'll keep an eye on it!

    The Forest is my favorite open-world/survival/crafting game of all time because, unlike Minecraft and others like it-- it has an end-goal/there's an ending.

    I can't just be given a sheet of paper anymore these days, I need to know there's an ending and keep me intrigued to explore new areas.

    After The Raft, Conan: Exiles, and Green Hell, Valheim has been scratching enough of that itch for my group and I, but we're kinda at the endgame with Mistlands (and even then there's not much story); we're anxiously awaiting Sons of the Forest but, after that, I'm not sure there's any other group-crafting-open-world games to enjoy (maybe Core Keeper or Satisfactory but there doesn't look like a story there) but this one looks like a good single player romp!

    2 votes
    1. Wes
      Link Parent
      Though oft-forgotten, Minecraft does have an ending. The credits roll after defeating the Ender Dragon and leaving The End. Of course I think it's fair to say that beating the game is not the...

      because, unlike Minecraft and others like it-- it has an end-goal/there's an ending.

      Though oft-forgotten, Minecraft does have an ending. The credits roll after defeating the Ender Dragon and leaving The End. Of course I think it's fair to say that beating the game is not the primary goal of Minecraft, and that it's far more about the journey than the destination.

      2 votes