Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Disney+ Removes Sci-Fi Film Because Of Controversial Rat-Drowning Scene

    17 June 2025

    Elden Ring Nightreign’s Most Mysterious Monster Is A Walking Building Almost Nobody’s Seen

    17 June 2025

    Mario Kart World Is More Fun When You’re Grinding Rails And Riding Walls

    17 June 2025
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube Discord RSS
    Tuesday, June 17
    • Contact us
    • info@xtremeservers.com
    Facebook X (Twitter) YouTube Discord Instagram Pinterest RSS
    Xtreme Servers
    Xtreme Servers Blog Ad 1
    • Home
    • Game Servers
      • ARK: Survival Evolved
      • Counter Strike GO
      • Gary’s MOD
      • Minecraft
      • Rust
      • Team Fortress 2
    • Servers
      • VPS Hosting
    • Categories
      1. PlayStation
      2. PC
      3. Nintendo
      4. Xbox
      5. View All

      The Final Fantasy Tactics Remaster Had To Be Brute-Forced Into Existence And Makes Some Controversial Cuts

      17 June 2025

      Rematch Launching Without Crossplay, Disappointing Many Players

      17 June 2025

      Share of the Week: Stealth

      13 June 2025

      PlayStation Says Marathon Is Learning From Concord’s Mistakes As It Doubles-Down On Live Service Gaming As A ‘Key Strategic Pillar’

      13 June 2025

      Disney+ Removes Sci-Fi Film Because Of Controversial Rat-Drowning Scene

      17 June 2025

      Elden Ring Nightreign’s Most Mysterious Monster Is A Walking Building Almost Nobody’s Seen

      17 June 2025

      Mario Kart World Is More Fun When You’re Grinding Rails And Riding Walls

      17 June 2025

      The Nintendo Switch 2’s System Transfer Is Great If You Do It Correctly

      17 June 2025

      The Nintendo Switch 2’s System Transfer Is Great If You Do It Correctly

      17 June 2025

      Your Switch 2 Has Notification Settings You Should Tweak For A Better Experience

      17 June 2025

      Nintendo’s Crackdown On Switch 2 Piracy Has Already Begun

      16 June 2025

      Nintendo’s Mysterious Absence From Amazon Ends With No Explanation

      16 June 2025

      Rematch Launching Without Crossplay, Disappointing Many Players

      17 June 2025

      Deconstructing Robots at Midnight

      16 June 2025

      EA Play: EA Sports FC 25 Is Now Available with Game Pass Ultimate

      16 June 2025

      New Pinnacle Bosses in Path of Exile: Secrets of the Atlas, and Tips To Take Them On

      16 June 2025

      Disney+ Removes Sci-Fi Film Because Of Controversial Rat-Drowning Scene

      17 June 2025

      Elden Ring Nightreign’s Most Mysterious Monster Is A Walking Building Almost Nobody’s Seen

      17 June 2025

      Mario Kart World Is More Fun When You’re Grinding Rails And Riding Walls

      17 June 2025

      The Nintendo Switch 2’s System Transfer Is Great If You Do It Correctly

      17 June 2025
    • Contact
    Xtreme Servers
    Home » Broken Roads Review
    PC

    Broken Roads Review

    Garry SmithBy Garry Smith10 April 2024No Comments6 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit Email

    This might sound familiar: a devastating tragedy has ushered in the apocalypse, and in its wake people have been forced to adapt to a harsh, lawless climate. Australian studio Drop Bear Bytes has designed a classic turn-based RPG set in (you guessed it) a post-apocalyptic Australia, reducing it to an unforgiving desert full of man-eating spiders, raiders, and even bloodthirsty kangaroos. While that setup is a little too familiar, what’s supposed to set Broken Roads apart is an intricate morality system alongside its more traditional RPG character sheet. That seems incredibly promising at first, making me look forward to tackling some difficult moral questions – but after 30 hours of play, it’s clear Broken Roads falls distinctly short of its own goals, to the point it feels somewhat unfinished.

    The specific circumstances under which you meet your adventuring party change depending on your background, but generally nothing connects you to the group of characters you travel with other than bad fortune. You’ll always end up travelling to the town of Brookton, which is quickly attacked by raiders from a technologically advanced settlement and burned to the ground, and then inexplicably stay with the town’s only survivors instead of going back to wherever you came from. Broken Road’s characters and plot are immediately so paper thin that they’re genuinely difficult to talk about – you’re introduced to a bunch of people who don’t have much personality other than being hard boiled survivors, and then you essentially become responsible for finding them a new home. Why are you getting involved? Why do a bunch of strangers trust you to make the hard decisions? Party members mostly don’t speak again after their initial introduction, so it’s difficult to tell. Broken Roads even introduces some magical realism later on to keep things interesting, but these plot points aren’t really set up well.

    The morality system is interesting in theory, but falls pretty flat.

    The question at the heart of this story is one many post apocalyptic games ask: who decides who should live and who should die? But Broken Roads just doesn’t have any interesting answers, which is particularly disappointing when an intricate morality system is supposed to be its centrepiece. Where other RPGs are happy to let you choose a rough alignment such as lawful good or neutral evil and call it a day, Broken Roads describes character morality by using actual philosophical principles and gives you a full questionnaire to determine your character’s beliefs. Are you a Nihilist who puts themselves first in any given situation, or are you more of a Humanist who wants the best possible outcome for the largest number of people? That’s interesting in theory, but because you have so little control over what happens, this idea falls pretty flat.

    There are very few conversations involving a moral choice in the first place, and you’re locked out of pretty much all other conversation options once you’ve started down a given alignment path, leaving no opportunities to try something drastically different later. In that way, the hard decisions Broken Roads teases you with are actually pretty straightforward, and the story doesn’t change in any interesting ways from the very few moral choices you can make anyway. For example, you can involve yourself in a town’s elections, but which mayor gets chosen doesn’t have any consequences on the larger events, and isn’t even brought up again in any meaningful way after the fact.

    One time I even rescued a person only for them to die immediately afterwards, completely without explanation or acknowledgement from any other characters. This could well be a bug, but it’s by no means clear – sometimes quests fail or resolve themselves if you don’t get to them in time, though these similarly have no effect that I can see on the storyline or your party. I went back a few times to see if different decisions would dramatically change anything, but they largely boiled down to disappointing dialogue differences: do you want to be mean or helpful? Broken Roads didn’t give me enough reasons to care about what I was doing as a result, and when I did make the effort, the rewards were pretty paltry.

    Broken Roads is often just a long line of fetch quests.

    Broken Roads is often just a long line of fetch quests, which doesn’t really make it feel as if you’re fighting for survival in the Outback. It’s also frequently tedious stuff – in order to infiltrate a community of philosophers, I have to talk to everyone, debate some characters in philosophy, and then scour several cities for a collection of philosophy books before I can proceed. This does make some sense, I’m making an effort in order to befriend a community, after all. It’s just… not fun to do, and it’s often not clear that you need to complete a random side quest to actually continue with the main task. Sometimes a character will ask me something, but forget important details (for example, exactly how many of a specific item they are actually asking for), leaving me to look it up in the journal. A lot of quests are busy work with no alternative, like exhausting every conversation option with a character. Sometimes, I even had to repeat conversations I already had in order to advance a quest. Broken Roads either tells me exactly where to go, or it tells me nothing at all, and both can be equally frustrating.

    You can get into fights along the way, though battles happen very rarely either as part of the story (which can mostly be avoided) or as random encounters while travelling the world map (which you can choose to flee from). Combat, which is turn-based in classic RPG fashion, is incredibly frustrating thanks to a very rudimentary UI that makes choosing targets difficult, as well as enemy AI that makes opponents do almost nothing but attack you constantly – even if they kill their allies or set themselves on fire in the process. It doesn’t really matter whether you fight a band of raiders or some angry kangaroos, as these fights play out pretty much the same every time, hampered by slow animations, a lack of enemy variety, bugs, and few really interesting skills to shake things up.

    Speaking of angry kangaroos – while it’s not very exciting to look at, a lot of love has clearly gone into Broken Roads’ Australian setting. The writing contains plenty of Australian in-jokes and a lot of slang that those of us who don’t speak Aussie can even hover over for a translation. And though it may not deliver in terms of story, the writing is very detailed and atmospheric, even if the occasional voice-over narration is pretty difficult to listen to. It’s just a shame that writing doesn’t deliver where it matters most.

    Go to Source (IGN.com)

    All content and images belong to their respected owners. This article is aggregated for informational purposes only with full credit to the source.

    Post Views: 139
    apocalypse devastating familiar forced have people sound Tragedy ushered Wake
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Email
    Previous ArticleOverwatch 2’s Plans To Be Less Toxic Have One Major Flaw
    Next Article New Prince of Persia Game From Dead Cells Developer Announced
    Garry Smith
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Disney+ Removes Sci-Fi Film Because Of Controversial Rat-Drowning Scene

    17 June 2025

    Elden Ring Nightreign’s Most Mysterious Monster Is A Walking Building Almost Nobody’s Seen

    17 June 2025

    Mario Kart World Is More Fun When You’re Grinding Rails And Riding Walls

    17 June 2025

    The Nintendo Switch 2’s System Transfer Is Great If You Do It Correctly

    17 June 2025

    Your Switch 2 Has Notification Settings You Should Tweak For A Better Experience

    17 June 2025

    The Final Fantasy Tactics Remaster Had To Be Brute-Forced Into Existence And Makes Some Controversial Cuts

    17 June 2025
    Add A Comment

    Comments are closed.

    Editors Picks

    Disney+ Removes Sci-Fi Film Because Of Controversial Rat-Drowning Scene

    17 June 2025

    Elden Ring Nightreign’s Most Mysterious Monster Is A Walking Building Almost Nobody’s Seen

    17 June 2025

    Mario Kart World Is More Fun When You’re Grinding Rails And Riding Walls

    17 June 2025

    The Nintendo Switch 2’s System Transfer Is Great If You Do It Correctly

    17 June 2025
    Top Reviews
    Xtreme Servers Blog Ad 3
    About Us
    About Us

    We were founded in 2019 with some key objectives, provide our customers with an easy, reliable, fast and enjoyable gaming experience. Welcome to Xtreme Servers.

    Email Us: info@xtremeservers.com

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube Discord RSS
    Our Picks

    Disney+ Removes Sci-Fi Film Because Of Controversial Rat-Drowning Scene

    17 June 2025

    Elden Ring Nightreign’s Most Mysterious Monster Is A Walking Building Almost Nobody’s Seen

    17 June 2025

    Mario Kart World Is More Fun When You’re Grinding Rails And Riding Walls

    17 June 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest news, articles & guides from Xtreme Servers by subscribing to our newsletter.

    © 2025 Xtreme Servers All rights reserved.
    • Home
    • Contact us
    • info@xtremeservers.com

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.