Manhattan Chase
Manhattan Chase is an action-adventure video game video game released in 2005 for Microsoft Windows. The game features a choice between two related storylines, both with female protagonists, with each on opposite sides of the law.[2]
Manhattan Chase | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Team6 Game Studios |
Publisher(s) | Denda |
Engine | Open Dynamics Engine |
Platform(s) | Windows |
Release | June 1, 2005[1] |
Genre(s) | Action-adventure, Sandbox |
Theatre of Tragedy - Fragment (is played during gameplay).
Reception
Because of the obscurity of the game, most sites did not review it with an exception of a few. Just Press Play gave the game a .5 score, criticizing the graphics, physics, gameplay, and storyline. "What an utter waste of a good CD. Good news is, if you actually bought this game, you now have a fine coaster added to your collection".[3]
gollark: Immediately undergo exponentiation modulo 7, then.
gollark: I do not understand that sentence ("The alternative is work a political method for political reason.") and it is not pizza, I have had no commercial relations with pizza companies, I am not paid to subliminally advertise pizza, etc.
gollark: I guess maybe in politics/economics/sociology the alternative is something like "lean on human intuition" or "make the correct behaviour magically resolve from self-interest". Not sure how well those actually work.
gollark: - the replication crisis does exist, but it's not like *every paper* has a 50% chance of being wrong - it's mostly in some fields and you can generally estimate which things won't replicate fairly well without much specialized knowledge- scienceā¢ agrees on lots of things, just not some highly politicized things- you *can* do RCTs and correlation studies and such, which they seem to be ignoring- some objectivity is better than none- sure, much of pop science is not great, but that doesn't invalidate... all science- they complain about running things based on "trial and error and guesswork", but then don't offer any alternative
gollark: The alternative to basing things on science, I mean. The obvious alternative seems to basically just be guessing?
References
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