Shadowrun series?

Irwin John Finster

Sonny, I Watched the Vault Bein' Built!
The GOG Summer Sale is happening now and I noticed the Shadowrun series on sale. Thought about getting it before but decided to wait. Anyone recommend this series? Some people say it's too linear, others love it.

Also there's some good games on the GOG sale - whole Stalker series, Metro, Banished, Stasis, Witcher series. Check it out.
 
It's of cyberpunk genre, so to help you with thinking whether to get it or not

Perhaps you've already watched it, but hey! Just help you to remember and listen to MrBtongue's wisdom as you ponder about it.

Personally, I'm looking forward to play them, but I haven't bought them since I've already lots of games right now, just waiting to be installed and played. It's also kind of unfortunate that the original Shadowrun game from 1993 was exclusively for SNES, so we don't have it on Steam and/or GOG. Maybe you can emulate it, but I don't know.

Also, @Gorefiend grabbed them just yesterday, so maybe you can ask him if he's already playing it.
 
OP said it best himself - some consider it too linear, others love it. I got onto the SR: Returns train early on, but found the vanilla one and its story generic and uninspired. The expansion was good, though, but I never finished Hong Kong. The encounters became a tad too formulaic when I'd already put enough hours into these games.

The engine itself has several built-in limitations that, without tweaking, don't allow for too many variations to how you can play your game - and such freedom is something I've come to expect from good cRPGs. As I said the combat became dull for me and the story didn't hold my blood pumping hard enough. For similar yet better tactical TB combat I'll open up XCOM instead
 
The GOG Summer Sale is happening now and I noticed the Shadowrun series on sale. Thought about getting it before but decided to wait. Anyone recommend this series? Some people say it's too linear, others love it.

Also there's some good games on the GOG sale - whole Stalker series, Metro, Banished, Stasis, Witcher series. Check it out.

My personal favorite is Shadowrun: Dragonfall. Incidentally, that is where my avatar is from.

I actually consider one of my favorite RPGs of all time. Great characters and a good story with some interesting choices to make. And a few different possible endings. Decent turn-based tactical combat, but with the possibly to complete some of the missions w/o any fighting if your character / party has the right skills.

So I'd say start with Dragonfall and if you like that, then get Hong Kong. Hong Kong's a bit heavier on the text / dialogue and I think it's possible to get through almost the entire game (except for the very beginning) without engaging in combat... SRReturns is still good but pales in comparison to the other two games (it much more linear, and unlike DF and HK, most of your companions don't have any personality or backstory).

One of the things I love about HBS' Shadowrun games is that there's very little filler content. Even if you're a completionist, you won't be doing a bunch of fetch quests and things like that. Even the side quests are very interesting and detailed.
 
I consider 16-bit RPGs one the best RPGs of the early 90s and a games that pave the way for the classics like Fallout, PS:T and Troika stuff. These are examples screaming that console rpgs might work.
The so-called sequels not much. They are, on the other hand, iOS entertaiment for whatever reason appeared on PC.
 
Shadowrun: Dragonfall still collecting dust in my steam cloud. Am not sure if i should try again to go through the terrible beginning with the stupid party banter.
 
I don't get the praise for Dragonfall's story, to be honest. It's OK and well communicated, the party banter is mediocre and the backstories for the companions isn't anything special either.

I also don't see how it's that much less linear than Shadowrun Returns' campaign. Throwing in some side-missions like the lodge and companion quests doesn't make it less linear to me. You're trapped in the same mission-hub just like in the first game.

The setting and atmosphere are awesome though, but I preferred the first game in that regard. Berlin and the Kreuzbasar didn't do anything for me, I didn't really care about it or it's inhabitants at any point in the game.

Tactical combat is atrocious, the AI is dumb as a rock and the AP are so limited it's hard to do anything fun during most of the game. It becomes incredibly repetitive and isn't really challenging.

The dialogue is pretty good, but too often choosing what to say is a false choice and every option will lead to the same line from the other person and the same set of options at the next prompt. I don't mind lots of text, and there is a lot of text in here, but I do mind when all that text doesn't really go anywhere, and I feel that sometimes that's the case in the first two Shadowruns, it's sometimes just a lot of empty words. Using skills or attributes in dialogue mainly lets you skip one room of combat or get some extra money.

Money is well balanced, you can't buy all the best gear right away and you'll have to make decisions what you want to focus on first, I applaud them for this since it's very rare in RPGs to not have a totally broken economy after just a few hours of gameplay.
 
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