About Roblox Is Unbreakable:
Roblox Is Unbreakable Infinite Cash & Arrows Script Roblox Scripts Max Payne may be my all-time favorite shooter. Alan Wake is the only horror game I really like. So you’d think Quantum Break would have been a day-one purchase for me upon its release 2016. It wasn’t, not because it got bad reviews, and not even because it was initially a Windows Store exclusive at a time when that app was largely dysfunctional, but because by 2016 I was already fully in backlog-fighting mode. I finally got around to playing it in 2021; I’m glad I did, even if Quantum Break is ultimately more of an interesting detour in Remedy’s exploration of narrative shooter rather than a landmark title. On the whole, Quantum Break is a much more conventional game, and narrative, than Remedy’s prior work. Max Payne and Alan Wake both make heavy use of meta-narrative; Alan Wake in particular is a story about storytelling. And both channel their love of language into the main character; Payne famously talks in purple metaphors and similes, and Wake is literally a novelist. In contrast, Quantum Break’s Jack Joyce is as generic as video game protagonists get: he’s a 20-something white guy of average intelligence, whose only notable skill appears to be an unusual proficiency with firearms. Every other character in the game is more interesting than Jack, who largely drifts through the game going “what’s going on?” before shooting dudes. It’s hard to tell if this was Remedy attempting to make a more ‘mainstream’ game, or just a lack of imagination on the part of the writers (notably, this is the first Remedy game not penned by Sam Lake).