Thread:Indominus Rex 2016/@comment-31330278-20180406204548/@comment-31330278-20180421213911

1. The third one, Bioshock Infinite, is unique in the series because it's more about fascism than about addictions. Think about a flying city, like the capital in Samurai 7 (a steampunk take on 7 Samurais by Akira Kurosawa). You play Bucker Dewitt, who turn out to be an incarnation of the main antagonist. Bucker's main mission is to save a girl named Elizabeth. Like Maxine "Max" Caulfield in Life Is Strange, Elizabeth can manipulate time. However, unlike Max, Elizabeth have more than mundane criminal and murderous people to deal with. She have a whole fascistic party hot on her tail, multiple lunatics who are what TV Tropes call "axe crazy" and a giant flying robot named Songbird. If you like games who tear fascism down (I know I do. I cant express how much I hate people who take their ideology into killing everyone who disagree with them), that's the game for you.

2. Interesting. The beast (Adam Beastman) will be murdered, so Gaston is guaranteed to like it. If I got you correctly, you suggest Gaston will help Cindi and Dee cover their tracks in exchange for seeing Adam get killed and getting Belle, right? Also, do you prefer he'll:

A. Killed by Tweedle Dee so Dee will be a state witness.

B. Killed by Cindi in an "you outlived your usefulness" fashion.

C. Lay low as soon as Dee and Cindi lose, but will get killed in later instalments.

3. You are blessed for not meeting anybody as cruel as Jill in real life. Now she doesn't scare me anymore, but I know more of her are out there, hurting other people.

4. What's Bendy and the ink machine is about?