Установить Steam
войти
|
язык
简体中文 (упрощенный китайский)
繁體中文 (традиционный китайский)
日本語 (японский)
한국어 (корейский)
ไทย (тайский)
Български (болгарский)
Čeština (чешский)
Dansk (датский)
Deutsch (немецкий)
English (английский)
Español - España (испанский)
Español - Latinoamérica (латиноам. испанский)
Ελληνικά (греческий)
Français (французский)
Italiano (итальянский)
Bahasa Indonesia (индонезийский)
Magyar (венгерский)
Nederlands (нидерландский)
Norsk (норвежский)
Polski (польский)
Português (португальский)
Português-Brasil (бразильский португальский)
Română (румынский)
Suomi (финский)
Svenska (шведский)
Türkçe (турецкий)
Tiếng Việt (вьетнамский)
Українська (украинский)
Сообщить о проблеме с переводом
Reminds me of some other game that would just drop random files on the Desktop folder... some devs are sick
Fear not, it is just a VHD disk image[en.wikipedia.org] (like a daemon tools iso) and contains no bootable script/executable.
Here is the file list, which you can access at \steamapps\common\TUSFitG\TUSFitG.VHD if you do not trust the virtual disk or trust TUSFitG.exe to run it:
You can just open TUSFitG.VHD with any competent archive program (recommend 7-zip)
I was going to upload the contents to cloud so that the paranoid don't have to worry but of course as expected there is a very special reason the entire drive has been included. You will need the whole drive to dive deeply into the mystery.
I would not trust any of the executables and they should not be necessary unless you start opening the installer cabs/containers and getting into hex editing, etc to see what's inside. I doubt that the devs expect us to go there.
For instance, I don't recall using a real gun when playing Far Cry. Yet somehow a few devs seem to think that would be normal...
The executable files really work, and install real programs on your computer. Creepy and scary.
So why was that necessary in the first place? Couldn't they just have included the drive contents as normal files and given the player a shortcut to open the game folder?
Having it displayed as an actual drive might add an ounce of realism, but is that worth requiring admin permissions?
there some additional hints in deleted files, no way to allow their recovery without using a real disk
Fair point, that sure is a cool gimmick.