I Almost Learned Something In Rv There Yet? But I Was Too Busy...
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To my right, a short, barrel-chested man in sunglasses and a cowboy hat staring back at me. They spark up a cigarette. I spark up a cigarette. Another man in sunglasses and a cowboy hat standing besides us sparks a cigarette. The man behind tells me to "punch it" and we begin our descent down a huge wonky wooden ramp, accelerating in our RV toward a plunge into a gorge and near-certain death.
We make it. As does the RV. Just. It no longer has doors, bumpers, hood, roof, ladder, windows, and the wheels are falling off. We collectively toke on our cigarettes, toss 'em, then spark up some fresh cigs.
This is RV There Yet? A game that's determined to drive me up the wall, figuratively, for including a question mark in the name, and literally, because it's a game about driving a recreational vehicle over big rocks.
It's the sorta game that's designed to be played with friends. A genre often affectionately called 'friend slop', it asks very little of players—costing only $7/£6 and with a control scheme that boils down to look at thing, pick up thing, throw thing. There are some interesting driving mechanics—you need to grasp the concept of a stick shift to get around but you don't have to worry about the clutch—and there are three whole keys dedicated to lighting, smoking, and extinguishing a cigarette. My kinda game.
There's not much in the way of story. At one point I had a feeling it was trying to teach me something about the dangers of throwing cigarette butts with abandon in national parks, but then I saw a really big ramp and the thought escaped me.
RV There Yet? is what you make of it. You're free to use your imagination as a team to get around its various puzzles. Most of which involve large rocks that you need to get over You can raise the RV up using ramps, planks, or pneumatic lifters, or just floor it and hope for the best. It leads to plenty of clips—perhaps not as many as Peak, or Lethal Company, or Repo, but it has the same appeal.
I played with the same cohort of pals I tend to play these sorts of games with and we've smashed through a bunch of it in a week. We've traversed hilltops, mountains, and mines on our way to… I've just realised I don't even know where we're going. I have no concept of where
Source: PC Gamer