![]() ![]() Speaking vaguely to avoid any spoilers, the moment a certain Rusviet officer creatively taunted Polania’s heroine Anna – I knew that Iron Harvest’s campaign would hold my attention. The campaign is a fantastic adventure with surprisingly good personalities introduced throughout. The aesthetic and themes are executed masterfully, and controlling huge battles in this world feels amazing.īased on their Kickstarter page, the development team set out to create an “epic campaign and strong characters” – and they largely succeeded. ![]() The result? Three badass armies filled with hulking, clunky mechs. Alt-Europe was littered with iron following the massive conflict, leaving the game’s factions to harvest those materials and race against each other for technological superiority. KING Art’s reimagined, post-World War I history feels authentic and immersive. for my Origin installation of "Syberia II," here's the path my shortcut links to: "F:\EA Origin\Games\Syberia II\Syberia2.Bottom line: Iron Harvest is extremely cool. The desktop shortcuts the installer automatically creates are simply shortcuts to the game executable (perhaps with a few command-line items in some cases?)įor example. it's pretty easy to make one manually if you know what you're doing. It should be TRIVIAL to implement this feature into your service UI, honestly. You guys are the "outlier" in this regard, in not having a similar feature in the game's "settings and options" menu in "Origin." This is a significant oversight, and really isn't a great thing. Steam, GOG Galaxy,, Battlenet, Epic, you name it. Most of your competitors have a "create desktop shortcut to game" in the "tools" feature of that game's listing. ![]() But it fails to allow us to create new shortcuts for games we already have installed, and don't want to uninstall-and-then-reinstall. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |