Ubisoft has for
Disney+ Subscribers: Star Wars Outlaws Nix Tail Wrappings Exclusive in-game Item for
Free.
Thanks to Community Member
khuzdul for finding this deal.
- Note: Ubisoft account and Disney+ Subscription required to redeem this offer; email used for both accounts must match.
Product Details:
- Stand out with this free and exclusive item, available only to Disney+ subscribers
- Nix Tail Wrappings is a unique in-game item that adds a stunning, luminous tail accessory to your character's companion, Nix, in Star Wars Outlaws
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It has nothing to do with casts but the non-sense flipflopping character development, lore-destroying scripts, episodes dragging directing and whoever signed off the show. The show could probably done in 90 minutes without all the filler and dragging, and give less time for audience to think how dumb everything it is. I don't even know the casts and director, other than Jedi Trinity and Squid Game, until episode 3. I had to look up who these genius that single-handly made a show to destroy the High Republic era.
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That said, professional reviewers often inflate grades because they are so scared of publishers cutting them off from free keys, so I ignore most of those, too.
Eurogamer is my go-to review site b/c they are by far the best reviewers. They rarely ever give out 5/5. And they aren't afraid to be the odd man out in calling out vacant gameplay--go ahead and look up some reviews and tell me that they aren't accurate. They gave SW Outlaws 2/5 which indicates a pretty bad game. https://www.eurogamer.n
"Star Wars Outlaws, by comparison, feels like it's blagging it - much as Kay can, when regularly caught out by some far more worldly syndicate boss. The result is a series of quite painful comparisons: it lacks the branching, open stealth of an Arkham game, the systemic options of a Dishonored or the incisive, relentlessly satisfying speed of picking enemies off in Assassin's Creed. It lacks the linear polish and charisma of Uncharted. Lacks the animation flow to its yellow-ledge platforming next to a Horizon, or the sheer joy of taking platforming and making it into an actual game in itself, as in Star Wars Jedi. And, somewhat nightmarishly for Ubisoft Massive, which couldn't have known about this when committing to it at the time, Outlaws opts to tell a Star Wars heist story in a world after Andor, which has already done so with such sensitivity, humanity and precision that Kay and co's cameo-ridden non-event is unfortunately left feeling lightyears behind."
FWIW I love this game, and nobody's review is going to change my mind. I've got too many 9/10 games in my backlog that I just found uninteresting. I generally don't feel the same as most reviewers on most games. This game feels like a little bit of Deus Ex, Mass Effect, Assassin's Creed, and Red Dead Redemption all put into a Star Wars universe, sans lightsabers. And it doesn't feel like those cookie cutter Ubisoft checklist games. It's honestly a home run for me.
If you're on the fence and not swayed by the naysayers, use Ubisoft+ to play the game for $17 worth of time to really decide if you like it. You'll also rack up Ubisoft points to use on a coupon for a future purchase, so that's a cool bonus.
That said, professional reviewers often inflate grades because they are so scared of publishers cutting them off from free keys, so I ignore most of those, too.
Eurogamer is my go-to review site b/c they are by far the best reviewers. They rarely ever give out 5/5. And they aren't afraid to be the odd man out in calling out vacant gameplay--go ahead and look up some reviews and tell me that they aren't accurate. They gave SW Outlaws 2/5 which indicates a pretty bad game. https://www.eurogamer.n
"Star Wars Outlaws, by comparison, feels like it's blagging it - much as Kay can, when regularly caught out by some far more worldly syndicate boss. The result is a series of quite painful comparisons: it lacks the branching, open stealth of an Arkham game, the systemic options of a Dishonored or the incisive, relentlessly satisfying speed of picking enemies off in Assassin's Creed. It lacks the linear polish and charisma of Uncharted. Lacks the animation flow to its yellow-ledge platforming next to a Horizon, or the sheer joy of taking platforming and making it into an actual game in itself, as in Star Wars Jedi. And, somewhat nightmarishly for Ubisoft Massive, which couldn't have known about this when committing to it at the time, Outlaws opts to tell a Star Wars heist story in a world after Andor, which has already done so with such sensitivity, humanity and precision that Kay and co's cameo-ridden non-event is unfortunately left feeling lightyears behind."
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