Reviews from

in the past


Infelizmente Pacific Drive não me agradou o quanto eu esperava, não é um jogo ruim, mas tem muitos elementos que acabaram tirando meu interesse em continuar jogando.
Primeiramente quero destacar os pontos positivos dele, as músicas que tocam na rádio são incríveis, a mecânica de upar o carro e de fazer as manutenções são legais.

O que não me agradou nem um pouco foi a sua história, achei muito fraca e desinteressante, chegou a um momento do jogo que eu simplesmente fazia as missões sem nem saber o porquê direito.
Outra coisa que me pegou um pouco, foi o fato do jogo não ser mundo aberto, não que eu ache jogos de Extraction ruins, mas acho que esse jogo caberia muito mais um mundão aberto.
As anomalias do jogo são muito sem graça, acho que se o game tivesse algumas ameaças reais, seira bem mais legal. Sinto que esse jogo tinha um potencial incrível e foi mal aproveitado, poderiam botar algum tipo de combate simples e um risco maior em cada run misturado com a mecânica do carro, seria bem mais interessante.
Como falei antes, não é um jogo ruim, da para relaxar jogando, mas acho que completar toda a história desse game não rolou para mim


You need to set your expectations right with this one to appreciate it. Pacific Drive is much more of a chill and occasionally spooky atmospheric looting/scrapping/crafting game with a focus on vehicle customization than it is a stalker-like or death stranding-like where death and danger are constant concerns. Initially I was disappointed by how loot-oriented it is, stopping your drive every 30 seconds to sift through a copy-paste interior with generic crafting mats is repetitive and not very interesting, but I eventually got into the flow of it. Moreso I feel the true letdown here is the anomalies: I think it would be gauche to want actual “monsters” - it’s not that sort of game, but the array of benign atmospheric hazards that comprise the bestiary here don’t really instill much tension in the gameplay; even in the final and supposedly most dangerous zone, there’s not much here that can’t be circumvented by just driving a little bit around it, and anomalies like “corrosive mist”, “shock mist” and “irradiated ground” just feel very uncreative considering they take up the same slots as tourists and wriggling wrecks that feel like genuine anomalies. The first time I got to the “Eerie Darkness” zone I was shitting myself at every random atmospheric noise, but once you come to the realisation that nothing is really out there and nothing will ever be there, the game kinda loses a lot of its mystique. Even from the perspective of the survival mechanics, the game is very easy - once you load your car up with reserve tanks and batteries, you’ll basically never run out of fuel or charge, and the result is that you can just gun it wherever without much regard for resource management in the lategame. In this sense I think it was a bad idea to make the game revolve around returning to a home base over and over - a continuous journey without free recharge/refuels could have introduced more long-term ramifications for bad decision-making, and it would have made me think about using all those oil barrels lying around that I never needed to touch or battery jumpers sitting in my trunk all game, and more linearity could have allowed some actual level design to be introduced into the game instead of endless proc-gen (it’s telling that the story missions that use preset layouts feel much more interesting than the proc-gen stuff).

Still, the atmosphere is so good in this game that I enjoyed it quite a bit, the driving mechanics are very well executed, and the quirk mechanic in particular is pretty genius; letting your car develop unique traits that further endear you to it, which is weaved in with the overarching narrative themes about obsession and letting go. I feel the whole narrative package would be a lot better if the ending was better though. [spoilers incoming!] I really thought the game was building up to a moment where you would have to sacrifice your own car, and I thought this would be really powerful. Every character in this game is wrestling with some sort of obsession that’s keeping them tied to the zone, and the game ends with Oppy overcoming hers and finally letting go of Allen’s death, and a very good parallel moment with the Driver needing to let go of their own car, which they’ve forged a connection with throughout the game, seemed like an obvious choice, but the game instead goes for a very video-gamey “you just unlocked Free Play mode!” ending where nothing really happens, which feels like it misses The Point in a narrative where letting go is the main theme.

Pretty cool game overall if you can take it for what it is, but I do think the same concept could be executed better, which I would like to see because the concept of this game is so good. In general I really like the “long haul through a hostile environment with gameplay revolving around logistics instead of combat” archetype and would love more games like it. Maybe I’m just looking forward to Death Stranding 2…

I had to sell my car when I moved to NYC 9 years ago and this game reminds me of what I lost. The feeling of sitting out a storm, watching the rain streak on the windshield while music bleeds from the radio. Or of perilously watching the hydroplane warning light flicker at 3 am while sandwiched between two eighteen wheelers on I-95. It can be meditative in one moment, harrowing the next.

While this game was quite grindy, it did not take away from my enjoyment of driving around the olympic peninsula. only main issues with the game was the tinkering station and how it was hard to listen to the story with everything trying to kill me.

I've never been a car person, never really adored long drives, but always found solace in them, and dammit if Pacific Drive doesn't just nail it. Your a survivalist, surviving basically hell, your best friend a run-down half-magical station wagon, and it is addicting as hell to play. While I was never to get into driving games generally, this one really caught my attention when I first saw it a year or two ago in the trailers, and I just really love it.

The gameplay aspects can be grindy and crazy sometimes, but this game really makes you connect with the car and enjoy your time with it too. Starting from a junk-heap and building it up as you explore doing everything from calm night-rain drives, to batsh-t crazy hydroplaning dodging anomalies, getting sparked by electric towers, and getting flipped by magic extending bits of earth. I'm really enjoying my time playing this, and while I write this before the end of the review, the story and the characters is secondary in my mind and the first time in a long time I tuned them out past the first few hours just to enjoy the drive. And even with my lack of car-care, there is something so unique and... nostalgic(?) about it all, like I'm a high school kid facing the world, great stuff.

Honestly, best experience so far in 2024 for games, and I'm looking forward to more, but this one will definitely stick in my memory for quite a while.


I'm so conflicted on this one. I was immediately convinced by the reviews that this was a game I wanted to play. The art style, the gameplay, the mysterious story. It reminded me of a combination of Subnautica and Outer Wilds in all the right ways. This game has the makings of a fantastic game and for the most part it is. It's just let down by a pretty lackluster story and tedious endgame with an ending that left me seriously disappointed.

I still think this is worth playing just for the early/mid game alone but I do hope they update the story or something because man that kind of killed it for me.




Pacific Drive is a rare case of a game that wrangles an oversaturated and stale genre by its neck and spin it into something original. It grabs everything about survival games and put it in four wheels.

Instead of the usual hunger, tiredness etc you now have fuel, battery, wear & tear and many other small gameplay mechanics and details that together forms a very cohesive big picture. Tending after your car can be a bonding exercise - and sometimes even relaxing, diligently fixing your car, organizing loot and researching new parts from the comfort of your garage after a panicked close call extraction.

One thing this game got absolutely right is the quirks system. As you progress through the adventure, your car starts to develop "malfunctions" that can range from being harmless, annoying, detrimental and even beneficial. It feels like your car is another main character by itself.

If you're a fan of diegetic sim games such as Jalopy, enjoy works of speculative fiction such as Roadside Picnic/Stalker and isn't bothered by survival mechanics and a little bit of grind, then this game is for you.

The only thing that somehow soured my experience is that it could have used a little bit more variety. Anomalies are awesome, but after a while you start to notice there's only a few types of them. Can't shake the feeling the game could've been more ambitions and creative in this regard. Same for the POIs: at some point I started ignoring them because they offered too little loot for too much effort (and it's always distributed in the same boxes/bags/etc). Lastly, Pacific Drive would have benefited from more unique stuff (such as exotic parts/equipment and decor) to reward exploration other than generic resources and the occasional random decal or paint.

I knew I’d dig Pacific Drive, but I didn’t expect the car maintenance to become my favorite part of it — or for it to keep me invested for nearly thirty hours.

My play style in games like this is to play the janitor: grabbing everything not bolted down and tossing it in my sack. That served me very well for the incredibly robust crafting system, amassing a large tool shed of doo-dads. Unfortunately, I think it also kept me too far ahead of this game’s best moments where everything is going wrong and you have to be like Matt Damon in The Martian to “science the hell” out of the problem, crafting the essentials to keep you going.

It pays to pay more attention to the details than I did: figure out where to find what kinds of resources and just grab what you need to have the best freeform experience. If you’re an anxious little thing like me, you might burn yourself out a bit on stopping for resources too often and losing momentum on some of the more grand objectives. As with any immersive RPG like this, it’s a dance between what you need to do versus trying to do everything. Finding that balance makes for the best trip.

Just like the best immersive sim games, there’s a tradeoff for the endgame that you either end up having the final mission that tests you in every lesson you learned — or lets go of the gas and lets you walk through a shoegazey reflection. This one fixes eyes to shoelaces, where I maybe wanted to really show-off, but it might be best for a game about driving to have at least one joyride.

I absolutely loved this game its just the little things that make this game an awesome game, the way you had to build/repair your car was so much fun. I also really liked the story, I would recommend this game 100%

Have played around 5h of this and I have to say it's a bit of a grind so far. No, it not even close to stalker. It's true that i has anomalies but that's about it. I am also not a fan of the aesthetics, the music or the feel of the characters (probably because I went in expecting something closer to slavic hell is other slavs and not this indie folk introspective isolation while a bunch of dudes I don't care about bicker on the radio).
Still, the game has obvious merits and I couldn't give it less than 3 stars with a good conscience. I might play it a bit more, or maybe I should wait into getting a new computer that can run modern stuff.

The ending was rather abrupt. The upgrade pacing was also a bit iffy but otherwise excellent in almost every other way. This game exudes atmosphere, in a way that shows how much love has been pumped into it. For a new IP riddle with so much progression, I'm excited to see what this studio does next.

This review contains spoilers

Listen I know the Balatros and Final Fantasies of the gaming world are overshadowing this one but here me out: Pacific Drive is so worth your time. It's vibe-y, it's got some genuine heartfelt moments, it feels /good/ to play (the controls for turning the car on, turning on your wiper/lights, doing maintenance in the garage... it's all intuitive and engrossing and yum), it's pretty, it's a perfect length, it's engaging... My only complaint is that the looting got to be a tiny bit tedious after a while (but by that time I was wrapping up the game anyway) but otherwise this is near everything I look for in a gaming experience. Great stuff 👍

I also want to note that the game has a ton of accessibility and difficulty options, you can really tailor the game to how you want to play. And to sum up the loop: you venture into each layer of the Zone for various narrative reasons one "stop" or area at a time and at each "stop" you can loot new crafting materials and scan spooky stuff, if you want, but it's not necessary to stop at each junction. I think the game is strongest when you're venturing deep into the map and just driving most of the time. But as you unlock further junctions, you get better armor and tools for being being more prepared each "run" and in that way, it's got light roguelike characteristics. By the end my car (affectionately named Barbara or The Barb) looked like a mean, capable, blue machine with her end game armor and fun paint job. We love a plethora of car customization options. Ok that's all bye 💙

The idea of constantly repairing and improving your car while driving through dangerous territory is awesome, and this game executes it well. Everything is so tactile and requires you to manually move pieces throughout the world using your tools. (I actually think this game would be incredibly cool in VR for that reason.)

Unfortunately, the mechanics of maintaining your car are not enough for this game to stand on. The gameplay loop is interesting at first, as you collect the many different resources the game requires to craft different parts, but by a certain point you realize that the entire game requires you to drive somewhere, loot, repeat. The atmospheric horror starts out strong, but the lack of any real threat makes it forgettable by the end of the first act. Most of the anomalies are lacking in flair, like electric clouds or buzzsaw in the ground, and all of them are extremely easy to avoid once you understand how they work.

This game is missing something key, whether it be a tangible threat or another system stacked on top to make the car system work that much better. This system would work well if incorporated into an FPS or survival horror game with an actual monster chasing you. Imagine how much more terrifying a chase would be if your car suddenly decided to conk out, and you had less than a minute to fix it. I wanted to love this game but its just missing something key that's holding me back from diving into it.

Tarkov meets eurotruck simulator
This game made me empathize with a car

This review contains spoilers

A solid entry in the survival-exploration genre that doesn't quite hold up to greats like Subnautica, Pacific Drive stands well on its own but isn't quite as engaging as I'd hoped by the end.

The gameplay loop itself is solid and has good bones that it shares with others: explore, gather, upgrade, explore a little further. There are dangers on the way, but my biggest problem lies there: the anomalies, while initially scary on first encounter, become routine and easier to deal with, and all are solved by the same simple tactic: simply drive around them. Only a select few actively chase you, and those are easily sidelined by an upgrade crafted in the opening hours of the game.

The largest danger is actually yourself and just how greedy you think you can get. My only death through the entire playthrough was caused by lingering somewhere I shouldn't and not healing because I thought I could get away with it. Entirely my fault and it was funny to boot, so I wasn't even frustrated at losing ♥♥♥♥.

Car customization is peak, though I wish we could craft our own paints and decals. A friend found purple paint, yet I never laid eyes on a single can of purple paint in my entire playthrough, plus running out of a favorite decal is frustrating under the best circumstances.

The added benefit of the customization station being locked behind progression that takes >2 hours to get to is hilarious for how much it pisses off the fash so that immediately earns points back, though. A+, devs.

Graphically, the game looks fantastic in its style but is so poorly optimized that I often had to turn down settings I otherwise wouldn't.

The story is fine, if a little basic, but I found the characters present endearing even as just voices on the radio and enjoyed listening to their banter. The lack of subtlety around Tobias & Francis' relationship was made even better with the lategame reveal that actually pulled my heartstrings a little. Well done, devs!

Pacific Drive is a new game that’s basically Stalker… with a station wagon. And brother, lemme tell ya, you’re gonna love the way you look in this wagon.

This beauty’s gonna be your lifeblood as you explore the mysterious post-apocalypse (??) of the Pacific Northwest, raiding gas stations, research bases, and derelict shacks for everything from fabric scraps to plasma canisters, which you’re going to use to craft upgrades and repair kits for yourself, but more importantly - your car.

See, when you first start, your car’s going to be a piece of shit. You’ll be trying your best to drive through overgrown pacific forests on spare tires and hope, with your body panels literally being held together by duct tape. But as you go further and further on, you’ll be replacing these shoddy components with rugged off-road tires, armored bumpers, roof racks, literal jump-jets, and electric coils to blast off anything that might cling to your car.

Because that’s another thing - you’re not just moseying around out there in the forest and small towns with you and your car. You’re doing all that while dodging a heaping helping of anomalies - ranging from helpful repair critters to devastating buzz-saws and creepy exploding mannequins. These anomalies are well-and-good as you’re looting, but everything ramps up to 11 when it’s time to extract - by the way, did I mention this is an extraction looter? Anyways - when you’re extracting, you’re opening up a temporal portal to warp you back to homebase, and the new denizens of the forest don’t like that. So now, you’re on a timer, screaming over hills and ditches, down mountains, all the while trying to avoid anomalous ley lines that hurl you up into the sky if you touch them, or abducting machine-beasts that will try to steal your car with you inside of it. It’s a white-knuckled exciting thrill-ride that turns the slow methodical looting leading up to it on its head.

When you finally get back to base, you’ll be given a chance to use your hard-earned loot to upgrade your car, as mentioned, but you’ll also get the chance to diagnose some… quirks… that your car develops in the Zone. See, your car is sort of anomaly itself, so sometimes you’ll get little mechanics gremlins that are simple - everytime you shut your trunk, the car beeps. Small, endearing foibles that feel like honest-to-god quirks you’d expect from an old well-loved car. But then you’ll get more.. Anomalous quirks. Stuff like, whenever you turn on your windshield wiper your car jumps upwards into the air, or when you turn the steering wheel to the left, your gas pedal slams to the floor.

These quirks are probably my favorite system in the game, because they’re developing while you’re in the zone. So you could be three sectors deep into your run before realizing that whenever you turn your headlights on, your car shuts off - so you augment your behavior around that newfound quirk. The best part, is that a lot of the time you’re not going to immediately realize what’s occurred. You’re probably just going to think - huh, that’s weird, why does my car keep cutting off? That’s because in order to fix the issue, you need to actually diagnose it first. You need to know that, not only your car is shutting off, but WHY it’s shutting off - what action is triggering it.

I know I’ve spent a healthy portion of this short review raving about this system, but I genuinely think that it’s such an awesome way to tie the gameplay into the feeling of owning and keeping an old beater car running. You develop a real attachment to the car as you’re tinkering with it, painting it, and fixing it up when it starts to buckle. It’s a system that works waaay better than I was expecting it to, which is a good thing, because the game’s best qualities sorta stop and end with the car and your interactions with it.

Looting the abandoned buildings and research stations is pretty dull, to be honest. They’re the same buildings, and nothing really changes, except for where the toolboxes are. For huge portions of the game, there’s basically nothing to threaten you while you’re on foot, so you’re just doing busywork gathering materials before getting back to your car. And it’s fun for awhile, gathering stuff that you know is going to be pumped into meaningful upgrades. But the abstraction of materials to plastics, scrap metal, rubber, etc means that you’re kind of just making the numbers go up. It’s not a strictly bad thing, and it seems clear that the game is doing this to further its ambitions to create something that isn’t another extraction shooter, but some small part of me can’t help but pine after this with an extra layer of imm-sim shooter spread over it.

With that small quibble aside, I really can’t recommend Pacific Drive enough. It’s a fantastic game that had me one-more-running well into the night.

What’s killing Pacific Drive for me is that I find the loop pretty dull. There’s not much to driving, the procedural loot map stuff is really mind numbing. A lot of the difficulty from the later areas comes from the hazard modifiers, which are mostly turning the knobs up on radiation, damage taken etc. A well-kitted car doesn’t feel all that different to travel in, you’re just turning the knobs up on your car’s attributes to keep up. 10 hours in, I get in a big ol’ crash — this part of the game’s good, just reacting to hazards, messing up and paying for it — but as I think of the loop I’m gonna have to participate in to make up for it, how little it differs from the usual routine, how much I’ve already been avoiding the loot cycle, I think I’m good! There’s just nothing to break it up. The narrative’s pretty slow, propped up exclusively by one-sided conversations with performances that’d be more enjoyably hammy if they weren’t the only thing driving the story, which consequentially feels pretty thin — not that I needed more than “haunted wagon, haunted Washington” to check it out anyway. Killer mood, mood killer to play.

I hate to shelve yet another game this year, but Pacific Drive’s somber tone, air of mystery and gameplay loop were fun at first, and quickly lost their charm and became tedious.

As far as gameplay goes, the real standout thing here is the tactility. Manual control is everything in Pacific Drive: you have to manually toggle the wipers, transmission, and the headlights, regularly refuel your car, recharge its battery and repair/replace every part of your station wagon’s outer shell. The replacements do have a tangible effect on gameplay, as well. A new set of wheels, or even just one of your old wheels getting loose or punctured have an effect on your car’s handling that is very much felt. The same tactility applies to out-of-the-car gameplay, too, though to a much lesser degree. You’re taught to disassemble everything and anything you come across in the Zone, but not every thing is interactable - far from it. Most doors are permanently locked, most anomalies are basically untouchable, and most of the tech in the zone is affixed to the floor.

The issue of limited freedom in general is the one you notice pretty much right away. The first minutes of Pacific Drive see you drive a car you can’t exit or modify, then you’re led through a string of highly directed tutorials where simple actions get introduced one at a time in a very limited environment. You literally are not able to do stuff like siphon fuel from a roadside wrecked car until you’re specifically told to by Oppy, at which point you’re finally allowed to do this very simple thing. This feeling of “there’s nothing to do until the game decides it’s time” persists well into the middle portion of your playthrough, at which point all illusions thoroughly break down and the game becomes predictable and simply boring. You settle into a routine: unlock some new recipes, repair/replace parts of the car, get on the road, go to a place, gather three thingamajigs to start a visually impressive but transparently non-threatening and directed sequence of doing a warthog escape through a portal, OR go through a gate on the other side of the area to do the previous routine in another place. Gathering supplies, avoiding anomalies and maintaining your car doesn’t change quickly enough: by the time I got to Mid-Zone I’ve already taken like 6 identical drives through the Outer layer, so it’s hard to be impressed by or interested in anything anymore. You know?

It’s a shame because I genuinely was starting to become invested in these kooky scientists’ past and present struggles, and if anything, the narrative and character work in this game are surprisingly decent. Too bad all you do is drive to a place and grind for new car parts!

Tentative 6/10, might change in the future

Me, every time I drive in a game from now on: It's just not the same as my shitty beat up jalopy from Pacific Drive.

just wasn't really into this one after the first hour and a bit. looked beautiful though and the driving was nice

7/10📜
«Pacific Drive could have set an example for top-tier games, but will only be remembered as an example of inventive 'presentability', the game pleases the eyes, but forgets about the filling»

From the first seconds the game captivated me with its visuals, the “Stalker” atmosphere, and the secrets of the sci-fi plot, so I must warn you right away that it was not worth it, think 3 times before buying,
Probably, I was too naive, thinking that a survival game, also with rogue-like elements, would not choke me with farming, but still the first prologue-hours were almost perfect, the music created tension, conversations on the radio showed that “we’ve also prepared a story for you here,” the semi-auto-generating locations, although they were infuriating with absolutely identical houses and cabinets, but the constantly changing anomalies could also create funny micro-moments,
That is, alas, that’s all, the atmosphere doesn`t reach the well-known (Stalker) series, the dialogues between scientists are far from “Firewatch” game ,even notes are not able to create interest in the game universe, because they use the style of obituaries, which is funny at first, but the repetition gets boring, the game, in general, has as much meaningless text as there is farming, which is also done quite problematically, for example, you will stop the car every 10 meters, put the handbrake on, open the door - get out, farm - go back in, start engine again - it really takes you out of the flow, imagine that every 2 minutes, for example, you would have to get up from the computer, and then come back, and again and again,
Now I will try to describe to you the essence of the gameplay, your task is to get from point A to point B, bypassing a random large number of anomalies-traps on your way, any contact with which is most likely to cause damage, and, therefore, make it more difficult for you to move to open point C, you definitely need to collect several energy flasks in zone B, this will allow you to open an evacuation portal, and you will need to have time to leave before you are devoured by the expanding anomalous “danger zone”,
After that, you will need to patch or improve the car in the garage (which can also be upgraded with new stuff), and again drive from point A, but to point C, in order to complete the plot task of turning on some levers and listening to pseudoscientific lore, or get to more rare resources that could not be at point B of the 1st danger level, by successfully teleporting from point C to garage, you will open point D - and so on, this is how the local web of routes works in all directions, if you die, you will not open the next point destination and you will lose all the collected resources, except for energy, which is also needed to discover new crafting recipes, the collected loot can still be found at the place of death during the next run, according to the plot you are essentially immortal, since you are magically connected with a machine that is constantly reborn from the ashes,
So, accordingly, there is no need to walk in anomalies, as in a Stalker game, ust scan carefully from afar to unlock new recipes, only some "traps” are always located near valuable resources, their effects are only electricity, radiation, devouring car parts, throwing into the sky - but all these are just different types of damage, each of which requires farming a separate defense resource, and there are also global map factors, such as anomalous darkness, or the failure of all electrical appliances in sector, as well as radiation “danger zones” - clouds of varying lengths constantly fly along the map, and the only enemies here are flying robots with a cable, pulling your car, a car part, or you personally in a random direction, and sticky balls (something like hl2ep2),
That is, look - it’s impossible to drive without damage, mistakes will be very expensive, runs last as long as competitive game matches, you always need resources to craft the same spare parts instead of broken doors and wheels, and what, then, do we have here?

Survival simulator for S&M! where you are not given any particular motivation to farm, except that the next time you break down you will be a little less angry than the last time, let`s agree - it`s so so, considering that even at the end of the game, you will still need the most basic resources of the very first levels, which, in my opinion, is not a very good job with balance, even despite the “hardcore” concept, although I haven’t played very many survival games, but usually over time it becomes easier to upgrade things from previous levels,
It’s incredibly disappointing that in a game in which you can take a hundred “movie frames”, which shows how a low-poly indie game can bewitch thanks to work with effects,
They forgot to make the game itself inside it, Steam is full of survivalist fans - why bother.. I try to avoid the word “farm, farm”, but that’s exactly how 99% of the game is described in simple language,
All the story missions are empty, click this and that, the story of the scientists is a “banal” drama, the ending is less epic than the beginning of the game (and how cool the music is at the beginning, and how inexpressive the rest of the game is), and there are a lot of non-intuitive things, or not fully explained, or simply inconvenient, while even the thinnest trees at the slowest speed will break the bumper and headlights of your car into rubbish, oh, this is the most vulnerable part, how you will suffer with it,
At the same time, your car will always have about 5 abnormal breakdowns that need to be diagnosed and found among hundreds of options, having a limited number of attempts, for example, when closing the trunk, the hood may open or an alarm may sound, which cannot be cured by itself,
The customization station is made tastelessly, and the “cool things” for the car, except for the steering wheel and the figures are too small that they are practically invisible, only the painting of the car is interesting, but, again, when the parts are broken, it’s all destroyed,
As a result, you just get tires and drive without any repairs or diagnostics at all (especially since there are free parts from the magic junkyard), because the game is too overloaded with this, well at least the physics of the car and everything else is normal, and if you get stuck, the car easily respawns,
The whole point of this game is to constantly keep you on your toes as you do the most routine things possible, just press forward (W) for 30-60 minutes, turn away of PC even for a second and you can touch the devouring trap, and if you suddenly run out of gas. .. uh, then in a couple of minutes it will have time to eat 90% of the painstakingly assembled car, and don’t even think about breaking something with the machine, you're so fragile that anything will break you, there is no change in difficulty in the game, the only good thing is there is a lot of gasoline - suck it out of the barrel, find a pump, and a battery charging station, again, if you don’t forget to add extra gas 50th time at the end of the game, where you have to go through 5-6 locations in 1 run.

If you are ready to do the same thing, the same thing, knowing that for the slightest miscalculation you will be punished, and if you don’t need a plot, then this is not the worst survival game, the number of various devices and recipes is sufficient, although any additional accessories turn into a sieve with any anomaly and may become useless on the first run,
they can give extra abilities btw (which you can assign to 4 buttons), such as a resource radar, auto parking, or a protective barrier - the only thing that makes life easier in the game,
The picture of the game will never cease to please the eye, you may not want to leave the atmosphere of the Strugatskys’ “Roadside Picnic”, in fact, the “early access” formula would be ideal here, technically everything works well (although it’s convenient to write off any bugs as anomalies), but in terms of content, it`s an empty shell, a process for the sake of a process, but it`s an incredibly beautiful and inventive shell, intelligently mixing ideas popular in gaming culture.

p.s. Even among cross-Playstation exclusives such as "Stray", "Sifu", or "Neon Whte", the game is at the bottom of my list.

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Игра с первых секунд подкупила меня визуалом, "сталкерской" атмосферой, тайнами научно-фантастического сюжета, так что я обязан сразу же предупредить, что оно того не стоило, 3 раза подумайте перед покупкой,
Наверное, я был слишком наивен, думая, что выживастик, ещё и с элементами рогалика, не задушит меня фармом, но всё же первый час-три пролога были почти что идеальными, музыка создавала напряжение, а разговоры по рации показывали, что "у нас тут и сюжет вообще-то будет", полу-автогенерирующиеся локации, хоть и бесили абсолютно одинаковыми домиками и шкафчиками, но зато постоянно меняющиеся аномалии могли также создать забавные микро-моменты,
То есть на этом, увы, всё, атмосфера не дотягивает до всем известной серии, диалоги между учёными далеко не "Firewatch", даже записки не способны заинтересовать вселенной, ибо используют стиль некрологов, что забавно поначалу, но надоедают от самоповторов, в игре, в целом, столько же бессмысленного текста, сколько и фармления, которое тоже сделано достаточно проблематично, например, вы будете останавливать машину каждые 10 метров, ставить ручник, открывать дверь - выходить, фармить - заходить обратно, заводить - очень выбивает из потока, представьте, что вам каждые 2 минуты, например надо было бы вставать из-за компа, потом обратно чёт делать, и так снова, и снова,
Сейчас я постараюсь описать вам суть геймплея, ваша задача - доехать из точки A в точку B, минуя рандомное большое количество аномалий-ловушек на вашем пути, любое соприкосновение с которыми, скорее всего повлечёт урон, и, следовательно, затруднит ваше передвижение, чтобы открыть точку C, вам обязательно надо собрать несколько колб энергии в зоне B, это позволит открыть портал эвакуации, и, надо будет успеть уехать, пока вас не сожрала расширяющаяся аномальная "запретная зона",
После этого вам надо будет залатать или улучшить машину в гараже (который тоже можно улучшать), и опять ехать из точки A, но уже в точку C, чтобы выполнить сюжетное задание по включению каких-то рычагов и прослушивании псевдонаучного лора, или добраться до более редких ресурсов, которых не могло быть в точке B 1-ого уровня опасности, успешно телепортируясь из точки C обратно в гараж, вы откроете точку D - и так далее, так работает местная паутина маршрутов во все стороны, в случае вашей гибели, вы не откроете следующий пункт назначения и потеряете все собранные ресурсы, кроме энергии, которая также нужна для открытия новых рецептов крафта, собранный лут ещё можно будет найти на месте погибели при следующем заезде, по сюжету вы по сути бессмертны, так как магическом образом связаны с постоянно возрождающейся из пепла машиной,
Так вот, соответственно, лазать по аномалиям, как в сталкаче, тут не нужно, только осторожно сканировать издалека для тех же рецептов, лишь некоторые "ловушки джокера" всегда располагаются неподалёку от ценных ресурсов, эффекты у них лишь только электричество, радиация, пожирание частей автомобиля, подкидывание в небеса, но всё это просто разные виды урона, на каждый из которых нужен фарм отдельного ресурса защиты, ну и есть ещё глобальные факторы карты, типо аномальной темноты, или сбоя всех электроприборов в данном секторе, также радиационные "денжер зоны"-облака различной протяжённости постоянно пролетают вдоль карты, а из врагов тут только летающие роботы с тросом, оттягивающие вашу машину, деталь машины, или лично вас в рандомноv направлении, и шарики-липучки (типо как в хл2),
То есть смотрите - проехать без повреждений невозможно, ошибки будут стоить очень дорого, катки продолжительностью соревновательных матчей, ресурсы для крафта одних и тех же запчастей заместо отлетевших дверей и колёс нужны всегда, и что мы, следовательно, имеем?

Симулятор выживача для садомазохистов! где вам не дают особой мотивации к фарму, кроме той, чтобы вы при следующей поломке бесились чуть меньше, чем в прошлый раз, согласитесь - так себе, учитывая, что даже под конец игры, вам всё равно будут нужны самые базовые ресурсы самых первых уровней, что, как по мне, не очень хорошая работа с балансом, даже несмотря на "хардкорность" концепции, хоть я и не очень много выживастиков проходил, но обычно в таких играх со временем прокачка вещей прошлых уровней становится проще,
Невероятно обидно, что в игре, в которой можно наделать сотню "киношных кадров", в которой показывают, как малополигональная инди-игра может завораживать благодаря незатейливой работе с эффектами,
Забыли сделать внутри этого саму игру, как в том меме - "лааадно, итак сойдёт", типо в стиме полно любителей выживастиков - итак схавают.. я стараюсь избегать слова "фарм, фарм", но именно так и описывается 99% игры простым языком,
Все сюжетные миссии пустые, нажми то то это, история учёных "банальная" драма, концовка менее эпична, чем начало игры (причём какая же крутая музыка в начале, и какая невыразительная всю остальную игру), при этом много не интуитивных вещей, либо не до конца объяснённых, либо попросту неудобных, при этом даже самые тонюсенькие деревца на самой медленной скорости будут в хлам разламывать бампер и фары вашей машины, оох, это самая уязвимая часть, как же вы с ней намучаетесь,
При этом ещё на вашей машине всегда будет около 5 аномальных поломок, которые надо продиагностировать и найти среди сотни вариантов, имея ограниченное количество попыток, например, при закрытии багажника - может открываться капот или срабатывать сигналка, что не вылечится само по себе,
Станция кастомизации выполнена безвкусно, а сами "приколюхи" для машины, кроме руля и фигурки, слишком мелкие, чтобы можно было что-то разглядеть, лишь покраска машины вызывает интерес, но, опять же, при разламывании деталей - это всё уничтожается,
В итоге, ты просто забиваешь и едешь вообще без ремонтов и диагностик (тем более, что есть бесплатные детали от волшебной свалки.. ну, с небольшими нюансами), ибо игра слишком перегружена всем этим.. хорошо хоть физика машины и остального нормальная, и если застряли - автомобиль легко переспаунивается,
Вся суть этой игры - постоянно держать вас в напряжении, когда вы делаете максимально рутинные вещи, просто жмёте вперед (W) на протяжении 30-60 минут, хоть на секунду отвернётесь от компа и можете коснуться пожирающей ловушки, а если у вас ещё вдруг бензин кончится.. уу, то за пару минут она успеет съесть 90% кропотливо нафармленной тачиллы, и даже не думайте сломать что-то машиной, вы насток хрупкий, что всё ломает вас) смены сложности в игре, если что, тоже нет, единственное - бензина на картах много - и из бочки высосать, и колонку найти, и станцию подзарядки аккумулятора, хотя бы тут не облажались, опять же, если вы не забудете в 50-ый раз залить доп. бензина перед вылазкой, состоящей из 5-6 локаций.

Если вы готовы делать одно и тоже, одно и тоже, при этом зная, что за малейший просчёт вас покарают, и если вам не нужен сюжет, то это не самый плохой выживач, количество разнообразных приборов и рецептов достаточное, хотя и любые доп. аксессуары превращаются в решето при любой аномалии, т.е. стать бесполезны при первой вылазке,
они же могут дать доп. способности (которые вы можете назначить на 4 кнопки), типо радара ресурсов, автопаркинга, или защитного барьера - вот это единственное, что упрощает жизнь в игре,
Картинка игры не устанет радовать глаз, возможно, вы не захотите уходить из атмосферы "Пикника на обочине" Стругацких, на самом деле, сюда идеально подошла бы формула "раннего доступа", технически всё может и работает (хотя любые баги можно удобно списать на аномалии), но по наполнению контентом - это ленивая пустышка, процесс ради процесса, в невероятно красивой и изобретательной обёртке, грамотно смешивающей популярные в игровой культуре идеи.

p.s. Даже среди кросс-эксклюзивов Playstation, таких как, например, "Stray", "Sifu", или "Neon Whte", игра в конце моего списка.

😊 Если вам понравился обзор, лучшая поддержка - подписка на Кураторку Стима: https://store.steampowered.com/curator/37365104

Fuck you Pacific Drive GOTY 2024

2 AM - Olympic Exclusion Zone - Outer Zone

I kill the engine, close my eyes and sit back in my car seat. The wind and rain batters the protective outer shell of my car, threatening to lift it off the ground and toss it down a ravine at any moment.

“There’s no such thing as a ‘Cursed Wheel’” I tell myself; and I believe it, I really do. It must have been my judicious use of the handbrake or driving a little too fast over a small pile of stones or a little too close to the Hot Dust 200 yards back. That’s why my front left wheel is loose for the fourth time on this excursion. It’s not Cursed.

I believe this despite being frequently pursued by semi-sentient balls of possessed trash and flying robots that want to steal my car. I believe this despite the existence of the Friendly Dumpster and the enigmatic-but-useful Pacemaker. I believe this despite every single piece of evidence to the contrary. There is no such thing as a Cursed Wheel.

Leaving it is an option. I can drive for miles without tending to it, I might even make it home if the conditions are perfect. Conditions are never perfect. A rogue squall could drift across at any moment and I could be left trying to repair so many more issues under a battering of acid rain or a confusing storm of Bollards and Shakers throwing my car and my self around like toys. Best to deal with it while the weather is only pre-apocalyptic.

I slide out into the maelstrom and tighten the wheel. It’s literally a moment’s work, even with my tools haphazardly thrown into a side-storage container. I even check around the car for any signs of weakness in the vehicles doors and panels, it’s the kind of thing that can save your life in the Olympic Exclusion Zone. All good, I slide back into the driver’s seat, soaked but satisfied. It’s time to head home.

I pick an exit point (why do they have to be so far away?) and all hell breaks loose. The real storm is coming and I am going. Fast. Tearing across the terrain in the near pitch-black at 100, 120, 140 km/h, squinting through the pouring rain. While my back was turned, exploding Tourists have drifted into the road causing me to veer into a ditch and mow down two dozen saplings before colliding with a tree. I check the dashboard console, no serious damage but the hold-up means that the initial storm has overtaken me and the worst is still to come.

Pulling back onto the road and flooring it, I can feel the true nightmare breathing down my neck, my exit point so near and yet not-near-enough. It’s a damn good job I dealt with that wheel.

An alert chimes on my dashboard.

There is No Such Thing as a Cursed Wheel

Pacific Drive is essentially Jalopy with more sauce. Starting out with this little shitcan strapped together with nothing but duct tape and a few prayers, you head out on a road trip into a beautiful depiction of the Olympic Peninsula.

I've personally driven those winding highways in a shitcan of my own - cruising through the pouring rain, the dreary morning barely lit by my shitty, clouded headlights; there's a very specific eeriness winding through those trees. Pacific Drive takes that innate emotion of the region and adds in legitimate paranormal threats and intrigue, the result is an incredibly compelling locale to base the core loop of the game.

Ducking into little shacks, scrounging for little bits of scrap, dodging the anomalies, racing towards the extraction, then heading back to the garage to upgrade the shitcan, my shitcan. Admittedly, Pacific Drive is often not exhilarating in its moment-to-moment gameplay, it's much more interested in building atmosphere as you crawl across the terrain. I doubt everyone will enjoy the gameplay here, and maybe I'm just too biased regarding the setting, but I'm overjoyed that a game like Pacific Drive exists. If you're a fan of titles like Jalopy, The Long Drive, or My Summer Car, do yourself a favor a give this one a try, I'm sure you'll fall in love.

So boring, the story isn't there and doesn't provide enough crumbs to keep me interested.

I never thought I would enjoy the story in a game about driving. This is basically like Jalopy, except way more fleshed out in terms of scope. The sense of progression is fantastic and the looting and inventory management were superb, and, the story was very good and the characters were all very wonderful, I found myself engaged in their conversations at times and I would laugh with them here and there. The driving physics were fantastic also, every bump the car feels it has great and the weight transfer of the car when braking felt solid also. Overall, great game, but lacks challenge; I died maybe twice in my 40 hour playthrough.


feel like i got catfished. the gameplay loop here entirely kills this for me - i was under the impression Pacific Drive was gonna be a linear(ish) journey to the heart of the Stalker Zone but it ends up being an almost roguelike experience centred around going out on missions from your garage hubworld. it's more of a loot-centric game than a driving one, one way less lonely and more game-y than i hoped. i'm not into crafting survival games at all but the concept really intrigued me, just not enough to not groan at its opening garage tutorial segment or not feel like it was getting tedious after two missions. not bad, if you're into these sorts of games you'll defo find something valuable here, just really let me down personally.

It's like a less scary stalker experience with a car in it, featuring fun gameplay and progression. The pacing and storyline are genuinely intriguing throughout the journey. However, reaching the end, you realize that nothing significant unfolds. Instead of feeling a sense of accomplishment and perhaps a tinge of sadness that often accompanies completing a compelling game, you're left feeling disappointed. Despite its potential for a solid 4 perhaps a 4.5-star rating, I could only muster a 3.5 due to the lackluster finale.

Pacific Drive - I wanted to love you, but at the end of the road I just liked you.

First, the good - the atmosphere, story, and music are all top notch. I enjoyed learning the lore of the Zone and figuring out how the characters were related to what was going on. The sense of place was unparalleled, and while I played there were moments I really felt like I was driving around the woods of my home state. The music, largely performed by local WA artists, was great and reasonably varied.

However, the good was somewhat undercut by the bad. There came times when the story "paused" because I needed to do a few drives to gather materials in previously-visited zones, and during these times I found it much easier to notice little annoyances in the gameplay and graphics. I found that some, maybe even many, of the gameplay systems became tiresome when I had to grind resources to engage with them. The music, while great, was limited to only 15 tracks. Because of this, at the end of my 22-hour run I had heard every song numerous times, and I'd grown tired of most of them. The performance was only consistent in its inconsistency, and the fluctuating frame rate negatively impacted my immersion in an otherwise deeply atmospheric game.

Overall, the initial impression was strong. After the first hour I would have rated this game 5 stars. After 22 hours, the magic had faded (but not vanished!). I still loved the story (despite a slightly lackluster conclusion) and the immersion this game offered was great, but undercooked gameplay elements and lack of variety eventually dragged the game down for me.

I'd recommend this game to any Washington local, or to people who enjoy exploration-driven games and can forgive some clunkiness.

Merhaba öncelikle şunu söylemek istiyorum. Oyun süresi bir araba sürme simülatörü için çok uzun olmuş. Oyunu ilk fragmanı çıktığından beri takip ediyordum. Adamlar nedense hiçbir fragmanda bu fast travel sistemini bırakın göstermeyi göz kırpmamış bile amk. Oyunun full açık dünya olacağını tahmin etmiştim neyseki önyargılı bir insan olmadığımdan dolayı oyunu denemek istedim. Ve 5-6 saat akıp gitti. Oyunun zaten çok klişe bir hikayesi var. (Spoilersız) Radyodaki insanlar sana komut veriyor. Oyunun hikayesi yok yani sıfır ara sahne bir tane bile yok. Nedense oyun overrated bir şekilde çıkış yaptı. Halbuki çok söylenecek çok eleştirilecek yanı var. Neyse oyun tarihine bir balon daha girmiş oldu. Oynanırmı? ben vaktimi 16-17 saat boşa geçirmek isterim diyen varsa benim gibi salaklar oynayabilir.