- #SOUTH PARK THE FRACTURED BUT WHOLE PC XBOX CONTROLLER MOVIE#
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I mean that there's a character who collects "yaoi," which Wikipedia describes as, "a Japanese genre of fictional media focusing on romantic or sexual relationships between male characters, typically marketed for a female audience and usually created by female authors." I mean that the password for Cartman's secret lair is "F- You Mom." I mean that the image above is a scene where you have to give a lap dance in a strip club to a middle-aged man who mistakes you for a short woman. I mean that there's a mini-game in "The Fractured But Whole" where you contort the controller to approximate defecating. I don't mean that "South Park" doesn't require an immense amount of intelligence and hard work to produce, which it clearly does. The image above is from a lap dance mini-game, where my character couldn't stop farting on this middle-aged man. Also because it sounds like "fractured butthole," of course. This time, instead of a fantasy world, the game is about superheroes - it's a send-up of the Marvel "Civil War" plotline, thus the "Fractured But Whole" name. Playing as "The New Kid," Cartman and the other usual suspects from "South Park" welcomed me into their new live action role-playing game. Just every other aspect of your whole life." As Eric Cartman puts it: "Don't worry, this doesn't affect combat. This is only true insofar as the game's story is concerned combat difficulty is set separately.
#SOUTH PARK THE FRACTURED BUT WHOLE PC XBOX CONTROLLER SKIN#
You may notice that the game's difficulty slider is directly tied to your character's skin color. Like the previous "South Park" game, you're once again playing as "The New Kid" in town. What that means in practice is you can create a character that easily fits into the show's universe - a conceit that "The Fractured But Whole" acknowledges head on, just like every other video game standard it embraces. If you're looking for an access point to role-playing games, this is it.ĭon't worry: You don't need to play the first game to enjoy the second (but it doesn't hurt). If this all sounds like gibberish to you, you probably don't want to play "South Park: The Fractured But Whole." That said: "The Fractured But Whole" is a very easy introduction to the world of RPGs. Combat is turn-based, meaning that combat is literally on a turn-by-turn basis - it's a tactical system instead of a real-time system. In that same vein, "The Fractured But Whole" is an old-school RPG with modern graphics. There's a lot of room to explore as you wish, as well as a main progression path to stay on if you'd prefer something a bit more straightforward.Īnd all that stuff is good! But it's the "South Park" writing and voice acting and storytelling that makes "The Fractured But Whole" something unique. You explore the town of South Park, talk to people, collect stuff, and fight enemies.
If none of this applies to you, or you outright dislike "South Park," I doubt very much that you'll suddenly turn around on the franchise after playing "The Fractured But Whole." It's essentially a very long episode of "South Park," the show, with a lot of interactivity. I played the first game (for work, but I enjoyed it!).
#SOUTH PARK THE FRACTURED BUT WHOLE PC XBOX CONTROLLER MOVIE#
I saw the movie in theaters a million years ago. I like "South Park," the show, well enough.