Outriders -
Do not skip the journal entries. The hidden lore about the "Anomaly" and the planet’s indigenous creatures is genuinely Lovecraftian and better written than the main campaign. The Gameplay: Cover is for Cowards (Literally) Here is where Outriders shines. People Can Fly made a deliberate design choice that sets it apart from Gears or The Division : Cover is a trap.
But now, looking back with clear eyes and countless patched updates, I think we were too harsh. And at the same time, maybe not harsh enough.
The tone is aggressively early 2010s. Characters scream lines like, "I didn’t sign up for this!" and "That’s classified!" with absolute sincerity. The main antagonist, a dictator named Seth, monologues about "order" while wearing a leather trench coat. It’s ridiculous. OUTRIDERS
It crashes occasionally. The lip-sync is awful. The final boss is a disappointing damage sponge. But when you leap off a cliff, slow time mid-air, empty an assault rifle into a captain’s face, then teleport behind his corpse before it hits the ground? Few games make you feel that cool.
That said, the crafting system saves it. You can pull any mod you’ve ever dismantled and slap it onto any weapon or armor piece. This means your level 50 "God Roll" purple shotgun can be as powerful as any legendary, provided you invest the resources. It’s a democratic system that rewards experimentation over pure RNG luck. If you played Outriders in April 2021, you remember the pain. The servers were a dumpster fire. The "inventory wipe" bug—where you’d log in to find every single piece of gear deleted—was a nightmare. People Can Fly had to literally restore items manually via support tickets. Do not skip the journal entries
In the tutorial, the game literally tells you that staying behind a wall for more than three seconds will get you killed. Enemies have grenades, flanking AI, and "Breacher" units that rush you with shotguns. The only way to survive is to be aggressive. Use your movement skill (Teleport, Leap, or Gravity Jump) to close the gap. Heal by killing enemies close-range. Chain your abilities like a fighting game combo.
The issue isn’t the quantity—it’s the distinctiveness. Legendary weapons have unique models and set perks, but 90% of the purples and blues look identical. You’ll see the same "Double Gun" skin for twenty hours. The armor is better, with each class having distinct silhouettes, but you’ll still be squinting at stat bars more than admiring your character. People Can Fly made a deliberate design choice
Outriders is a game of violent contradictions. It is janky yet hypnotic. Its story is laughable, yet its lore is fascinating. Its endgame is repetitive, yet its core combat loop is arguably the most visceral in the genre. So, grab your favorite anomaly-infused sidearm, and let’s dive back into the planet Enoch. Let’s get the obvious out of the way: Outriders is not subtle. You wake up as a custom protagonist who has been in cryo-sleep for decades. The moment you step out, you are immediately thrown into a civil war on a hostile alien world, betrayed by your own commander, and accidentally imbued with reality-bending superpowers called "Anomaly abilities."