Where The Witcher 3’s loading screens are intrusive only very occasionally when traversing the open-world, the same could not be said of Fallout 4. Luckily, a subsequent patch fixed the issue in the months after release. But we didn’t need minute-or-two-long loading screen times for that, thank you very much. Sometimes I think Souls games are like therapy, raising your adrenaline to panic-attack levels before teaching you to breathe, woosah, and keep your composure. It’s one thing getting your ass handed to you, it’s quite another to have to sit there, red with anger, twiddling your thumbs patiently before having the chance to try again. It truly was the loading times that were almost worse than the deaths themselves. What was truly upsetting was having to wait endlessly for Bloodborne to load time after time in between each aggravating death. But that wasn’t even the upsetting part, oh no. It was also punishingly, no, infuriatingly hard, which meant dying… a lot. Typical of the developer behind the iconic and seminal Souls series, Bloodborne featured superb combat and top-notch level design, all wrapped in a brooding, wickedly dark atmosphere. FromSoftware’s PS4 exclusive Bloodborne was a critical and commercial darling that’s sure gone down as one of the games of this generation.
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