Have you played Super? If not, you should change what you are doing right now to play the super. In fact, released in 2013, it is a science -fi puiler that depends on your ability to make your own clone, which then imitates each of your motions. With this simple concept, the sweeper produces some pleasant mental confusion, and a story that investigates the question of personal identity with painful heat. Oh, and it’s all wrapped in Erie, mud -based art that still looks beautiful today.
But not quite beautiful, according to developers FacePalm Games. Over the past week, the end of the FacePalm game, the end of uploading a series of updates to the son’s beta blood has been constantly uploading. First appropriate steam refreshing In a steam blog in 11 years, FacePalm writes, “The real purpose of this release was focusing on the route that had gathered in the past years.” “But we can’t resist some of the visual, agile and input adjustments that make the game feel a bit smooth.”
Various touchups of the sweeper include light divering, improved edges when the field depth is turned on, updated textures, and bump map antioxing. Meanwhile, the audio has been extended with more natural sound panning and slightly loud text bulp. Finally, the update includes a group of Big Fixes, which has to fix a problem from small changes such as correcting the types in the subtitle, where access to hidden terminals is due to “destructive failure”.
FacePalm says visual and audio updates “okay that if you are not looking for them, they cannot care for anyone”, so they have added the Legisian branch to the steam to allow players to see how the game looks like the game. The Legacy Branch maintains the essential stability reform, though, you may enjoy the actual visuals without worrying about insects or cracks.
In addition to these quality of life additions, the sweeper is now confirmed by the steam deck. It seems immediately of the start of the update. This has happened later, as the update post has been amended to explain its verification, actually saying, “We hope it will be reviewed soon for official compatibility.”
In any case, the sweeper handheld seems tailor for gaming, though it was released several years before the steam -deck Gabbin’s eye blinks. If you like it to be in a portable mode, FacePalum notes that “the central branch is recommended when playing a handheld because improvement in visual stability has a more significant effect on smaller resolutions.”
Although the sweeper is the only game that FacePalm has developed as an institution, its director Oli Harjula happily created chaos (and very successful) Rogeliak Navita. Meanwhile, Sweeper’s author, Tom Jobert, covers the story for the principle of Talos and parts of his sequel are written, both of which share the heatical elements with the puzzle puzzle.