Instalează Steam
conectare
|
limbă
简体中文 (chineză simplificată)
繁體中文 (chineză tradițională)
日本語 (japoneză)
한국어 (coreeană)
ไทย (thailandeză)
български (bulgară)
Čeština (cehă)
Dansk (daneză)
Deutsch (germană)
English (engleză)
Español - España (spaniolă - Spania)
Español - Latinoamérica (spaniolă - America Latină)
Ελληνικά (greacă)
Français (franceză)
Italiano (italiană)
Bahasa Indonesia (indoneziană)
Magyar (maghiară)
Nederlands (neerlandeză)
Norsk (norvegiană)
Polski (poloneză)
Português (portugheză - Portugalia)
Português - Brasil (portugheză - Brazilia)
Русский (rusă)
Suomi (finlandeză)
Svenska (suedeză)
Türkçe (turcă)
Tiếng Việt (vietnameză)
Українська (ucraineană)
Raportează o problemă de traducere
True, but then if you kill yourself as you are rescuing Demichev from the burning building, you don't live to acquire the TMD to go back in time to save Barisov from Demichev, then Demichev lives only to burn in the building because you kill yourself as you are rescuing him.
Or does Demichev try to kill Barisov after the burning building incident?
A better fourth ending then would be Renko letting them both live, and him taking the TMD with him to wherever. That choice unfortunately, is not available.
Dang...that's...that's right.
See, gameplay-wise Singularity runs circles around TimeShift. But the time manipulation theory is handled much simpler in TimeShift. I actually got to think about time manipulation theory with TimeShift than with Singularity. With Singularity, I get my mind too wrapped up in the "Kobayashi Maru" type scenarios where you don't get to revert the timeline back to normal. You know? The "What if I do this?" or "If they only did this."
That, plus the fact that time manipulation is dependent on things being contaminated or treated with E99 particles and that E99 itself is more unstable than uranium smoking crack...
Ha! At least I've finished the game. Moving on...