![]() Want to hold that man at gunpoint? Here are the chances he'll obey, shown via a simple little bar. ![]() It's an easy language to learn, with information tucked away in menus that blossom out as you hover over crook and cop. You see it all through a haze of snazzy, minimalist iconography that does away with numbers and excessive description. It's a pretty place in rural America, with a smudged, almost impressionist bent to the bushes and dirt, contrasted against unambiguous buildings. The town was definitely worth saving, though. The writing is as shaky as you might expect from the premise, leaning hard enough on cliché to make me seriously worry about cliché's structural integrity, and I confess I didn't pay much attention to the Russian, or exactly how my cops batonned, stabbed and shot their way towards him. They've got far too many other problems.įirst and foremost, a shady Russian has the authorities on his payroll, leaving just your ragtag group of insurgent po-po to hunt him down and save the town. But I don't hold this against the Unapproved Fuzz. Admittedly, it's injustice that stems from the corrupting hands of criminal underlords, rather than those that hold power in certain real world police forces. In this turn-based, tactical, XCOM-ish spin-off from This Is The Police, your cops are indeed rebels, rallying against systemic injustice. As such, I'm glad Rebel Cops steps away from it a little. ![]() Not unsurprising, as the fantasy makes sense in a macho, often politically dubious sort of way. It’s interesting how often cops crop up as heroes. ![]()
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