Towers of Aghasba Video Game Free Download Repacklab
Towers of Aghasba, the new Early Access endeavor from Dreamlit Inc, caught my imagination and attention when the first trailer appeared a year ago. This debut indie game claims to be a meeting of monster hunting, 3D city building, and survival crafting. In reality, it is a meeting of frustration, boredom, and more bugs than even Timon and Pumba could scarf down. I am embarrassed on behalf of the developers that they felt this was fit for human interaction in any way, even in Early Access. In Towers of Aghasba, you play as a young boy who is tasked with revitalizing the land a dark magic has left desolate. Starting with the powers imbued by a strange crystal, you are intended to rebuild civilization one bit at a time, bringing trees and life back to the crags and crevices of this once beautiful kingdom. That’s what you’re supposed to do, at least, if the game even runs long enough to get you through the tutorial without a crash to desktop. REPACKLAB.COM SEXY GAMES
Before describing all the technical problems I’ve had with Towers of Aghasba, I feel it prudent to share that I have a pretty high end PC rig. Even with my RTX 3080 and Ryzen 7 3800x, I experienced near constant crashes to desktop, frame drops, broken land geometry, and even Steam crashes. The developers put out a day one update, and while that fixed the problem that wouldn’t let me navigate the menus (yeah), it did little to help stabilize the game. Even lowering the settings to medium, Towers of Aghasba constantly froze. Characters were constantly clipping through full structures, and my own character seemed unable to move more than 30 feet without getting trapped in a rock, a boat, or just nothing at all, requiring a restart.
Quest Tracking Woes: Incomplete Journals and Confusing Objectives
The game only has an option for PlayStation button prompts, even when I have my Xbox controller plugged in, leading to great frustration as I kept mixing up where the X button was. It did show Xbox prompts for a few seconds sometimes for no discernible reason, making this all the more aggravating. There’s a journal to track your quests, but it doesn’t tell you what you need to do for the quests. None of the animations are finished. Moreover, this is a game that is almost entirely about picking up crafting materials off the ground every few seconds, and every time you do a full three second unfinished animation plays. If you recall, this was such an aggravating feature in Horizon Forbidden West that Guerilla Games actually had to patch it out to convince players to pick up the game again. S.T.A.L.K.E.R. 2: Heart of Chornobyl
It’s so much worse in Towers of Aghasba because you’re doing it at least 10 times every minute while exploring. It probably is no surprise that the building mechanics don’t really work either, and the combat is pretty much impossible when enemies are teleporting around because they are glitching into and out of existence. Never mind the fact that the frame rate is cycling anywhere between 1 and 60 for seemingly no reason at all times. On top of all of this, everything about the story and characters that has been presented so far is some of the most boring material I’ve ever had the misfortune of being exposed to.
Scavenging for Hours: A Vicious Cycle of Crafting and Gathering
The crafting system feels artificially tight-fisted, almost as if it’s deliberately padding out the run-time by making you scavenge for hours. If all you’re walking on are broken branches, you should be able to pick up a stick, yet supposedly common items are sometimes scarce when you really need them. You end up in a vicious cycle of crafting items that you need to craft items that you need to craft items, so sourcing the materials for the bridge fix alone – a fairly early yet vital task – can take four hours. Liar’s Bar
It doesn’t matter how pretty it is or how organic the game world, eventually that’s just not fun. Sadly this isn’t an isolated occurrence, with some ingredients even locked away behind citadel upgrades that require yet more items you haven’t got easy access to, so it can get rather frustrating. And so you start to industrialize, which is surely counter-productive given the game’s eco stance and, either way, all takes so much time.
Towers of Aghasba: An Impressive Adventure with Room for Improvement
Even so, Towers of Aghasba is an impressive and involved adventure, even in this unfinished state. The ability to change and develop its vast world is enjoyable, crossplay is due to be added soon for multiplayer co-op if that’s your thing (and it doesn’t need to be), and the larger creatures and enemies you see as you progress do look superb. The magical realism of the environment and its bizarre cast of characters means you’re never quite sure what you’ll bump into next, which is great – the family “with the fingers” is a standout.
That said, considering Breath of the Wild has crafting and breakable weapons yet never feels like a chore (and arguably has more memorable sights to see too), this still has some work to do. Still, you can’t play Zelda on PS5 or PC, so that will make this attractive for many. Just clear your diary if you plan to go big with this one, it’s very long and doesn’t give you anything for free. Bloons TD 6
Add-ons:(DLC/Updates/Patches/Fix/Additional Content released USA,EU/Packages/Depots):
– | VC 2024 Redist | – | – | – | – |
– | – | – | – | – | – |
– | – | – | – | – | – |
2024 Games | – | – | – | – |
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
OS: Windows 10 (64-bit)
Processor: Intel Core i5-6600K or AMD FX-8350
Memory: 16 GB RAM
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 1070 or AMD Radeon RX 580
DirectX: Version 12
Network: Broadband Internet connection
Storage: 40 GB available space
Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
OS: Windows 11 (64-bit)
Processor: Intel Core i7-8700K or AMD Ryzen 5 3600X
Memory: 32 GB RAM
Graphics: NVIDIA GeForce RTX 2080 or AMD Radeon RX 6800 XT
DirectX: Version 12
Network: Broadband Internet connection
Storage: 40 GB available space
Sound Card: Supports 5.1 or 7.1 surround sound
HOW TO CHANGE THE LANGUAGE OF A ANY GAME
1. Check the in-game settings and see if you can change it there. If not, continue down below. You might have to try and use Google Translate to figure out the in-game menus.
– Steam Games –
2a. Look for an .ini file in the game folder or subfolders. Could be called something like steam_emu.ini, steamconfig.ini, etc., but check all the .ini files. There should be a line for language/nickname that you can edit in notepad. If not, look for a “language” or “account_name” text file that you can edit. (If not in the game folder, try C:\Users\USERNAME\AppData\Roaming\ SteamEmu Saves\settings). Save and open the game again.
– GOG Games –
2b. Same steps as Steam games except instead of .ini files, look for .info files
If these steps don’t work, then the files for the language you are looking for might not be included. We only check for English here.