You had better pay your guild dues before you forget. You are 113 months behind.
You remove a pair of oval ora-framed spectacles with pale grey lenses from in your ebon linen vest.
You unfold the earpieces of your spectacles.
You put on a pair of oval ora-framed spectacles with pale grey lenses.
You think to yourself, "Deal with it."
2 hours after the last patch was downloaded on my PS5, the SAME problems keep happening. I took a break from it because I am playing with anxiety the entire time hoping the game won't freeze.
The fact that CDPR said the other day not to hold a lot of items in your inventory, for you may lose your save file or it may become corrupted (Which is happening) is peak bullshit when it comes to this game. I think when the next gen release comes out (If it ever does) I'll play it more out of curiosity which is sad.
I haven't had much issues with the game as far as glitchyness goes. Occasionally I'll see a graphical artifact or have to restart a quest in order to re-trigger a key dialogue that I missed, but other than that it plays just fine in Chrome / Stadia.
One of my favorite things about the game is how pedestrians freak the fuck out when you drive near them. The shit they say cracks me the hell up. Even if you're carefully creeping by they act like it's the end of the world and I love it.
Make Shattered a $5 stand-alone subscription
CD Projekt SA said Wednesday it will delay a promised update to the much-criticized role-playing game Cyberpunk 2077, pinning the blame for its slow progress on a recent security breach. From a report:
What the Polish publisher didn't say is that most of its employees have been locked out of their workstations for the past two weeks, according to people familiar with the matter. The work stoppage is the result of a ransomware attack disclosed on Feb. 9. The extent of the disruption, which hasn't been previously reported, poses a major setback to CD Projekt's attempt to rescue a game in desperate need of repairs. CD Projekt has said it refused to pay a ransom to the hackers. As a result, employees remain unable to log onto the company's virtual private network, making it impossible to access the systems and tools needed to do most of their jobs, said the people, requesting anonymity because they weren't authorized to talk publicly. Although some CD Projekt employees are working from the headquarters in Warsaw, the majority are at home due to the coronavirus pandemic.
Make Shattered a $5 stand-alone subscription