From immersive gameplay to its catalog of 150 missions and plenty of story and lore along the way, there’s a heap of content to get your hands on from day one. Those who have played the likes of Hunt: Showdown<\/em> or Call of Duty<\/em>‘s DMZ<\/em> will feel right at home in GZW<\/a><\/em>, as well as those who frequent the battlefields in Escape from Tarkov<\/em>. Much has been said about MADFINGER’s decision to launch GZW<\/em> this week, with many believing the devs are capitalizing on Tarkov<\/em>‘s capitulation following the highly-panned launch of a new “pay-to-win” edition<\/a> for the game, which fans have labeled “disgusting.”<\/p>
Other players believe GZW feels a little undercooked<\/a> despite its status as an early access game due to the launch coinciding with the outcry around Tarkov<\/em>. Many have encountered server troubles, latency issues, and very buggy gameplay\u2014but the MADFINGER team has already been hard at work with numerous hotfixes and a public test server<\/a>.<\/p>
Gameplay issues haven’t stopped fans with over 65,000 players dropping into GZW<\/em> on April 29 and 30, according to stats site SteamDB<\/a>. The base version of GZW<\/em> is available from the Steam store for $34.99 USD, with several other DLC add-ons also available\u2014something that hadn’t gone unnoticed, with some early-adopting players still struggling to work out which special edition actually included the base game<\/a>.<\/p>
If you don’t mind the occasional glitch and your PC is up to scratch<\/a>, GZW<\/em> is out now, with plenty of updates expected down the track from the MADFINGER crew.<\/p>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"