Originally released in 2005, and developed by the Ukrainian studio Deep Shadows, Boiling Point: Road to Hell is an extremely buggy, flawed, and some would claim unforgettable open world FPS. It arrived at a time when open worlds were relatively uncommon and, well, kinda showed why: the game was absolutely overreaching in its goals, and pratfalled at nearly every turn. Yono all app Now it's being re-released on both Steam and GOG.
Get a load of the Steam store description. "Upon finding out his daughter has been kidnapped in the pseudo-South American country of Realia, Saul Myers, a veteran of the French Foreign Legion, must head to Realia on a rescue mission." Saul Myers himself is a candidate for most forgettable protagonist ever, but that's of a piece with a cast that includes the likes of villain Don Esteban. To give an idea of the game's ambition, it takes place on a map that's 450 kilometres squared, with six factions scattered across it that you can align or oppose, a reputation system, wildlife, destructible scenery, and vehicles including tanks, helicopters, planes and boats.
If you're thinking "well this sounds like the best game ever" then you wouldn't be alone. Despite its manifold faults and endemic bugs, Boiling Point did find something of an audience when it originally released. PC Gamer's review awarded it a generous 61%, calling the game a "classic example of a small, scrappy, but wildly ambitious developer trying to build something on a scale that would make even a blockbuster studio’s eyes water. The result is a hilariously buggy open-world FPS that isn’t quite funny enough to justify playing it. The patch notes, however, are hilarious, all yono app including 'Police station cannot be destroyed by crossbow anymore.'"
Also memorable was PCG's stablemate Edge, which awarded the game one of its lowest-ever scores of [2] before magisterially noting that several months go rummy after launch many of the most notable bugs had been fixed: which removed what little fun there was.
Boiling Point: Road to Hell will release on Steam and GOG on November 14, and is being published by retro specialist Ziggurat (it was originally published by Atari). There's no price listed for the game, but suffice to say that, even if you're interested, it may be one to wait for a sale.