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Outriders Review

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.

This creates a rhythm I haven’t felt since Doom (2016) . As a Devastator (the tank class), you’re an immortal boulder rolling downhill. As a Trickster, you’re a teleporting reaper. As a Pyromancer, you’re an area-denial arsonist. And as a Technomancer—well, you get to break the rules with turrets and long-range artillery, but even then, you’re encouraged to stand your ground, not hide.

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.

When OUTRIDERS dropped in April 2021, the gaming world was skeptical. Developed by People Can Fly (the geniuses behind Bulletstorm and Gears of War: Judgment ) and published by Square Enix, it arrived in the shadow of Destiny 2 ’s dominance and Outriders ’ own disastrous demo server issues. Most critics wrote it off as "that other looter-shooter" — a game trying to cash in on a trend three years too late. OUTRIDERS

People Can Fly set out to make a brutal, power-fantasy looter-shooter. They succeeded. It just took a few patches to get there.

Cross-play was broken for months. The endgame "Expeditions" were timed, which forced players into pure DPS builds, invalidating entire support playstyles.

And yet… it works. Not because it’s good, but because it commits. There is no ironic winking at the camera. Outriders plays its grimdark, post-apocalyptic soap opera completely straight. By the time you reach the forest zone—haunted by a demonic entity made of pure anomaly energy—you’re either rolling your eyes or nodding along. I was nodding. In the tutorial, the game literally tells you

To the developer’s credit, they fixed almost all of it. The 2022 "Worldslayer" expansion overhauled the endgame, removed timers from most expeditions, added a roguelite "Trial" mode, and introduced the PAX skill trees (which are bonkers powerful). Today, Outriders is a stable, complete experience. But first impressions matter, and that launch tainted the game’s reputation forever. Short answer: Yes, especially with friends.

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.

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. Use your movement skill (Teleport, Leap, or Gravity

Outriders showers you in guns. Blue, purple, and eventually legendary (gold) drops happen constantly. You will spend a significant portion of your playtime in the menus, comparing stats, dismantling duplicates, and applying mods. For loot gremlins, this is heaven. For everyone else, it’s exhausting.

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."

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Revista Portuguesa de Cardiologia (English edition)
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