"What did that teach us? well need need to pay attention to the environment", Proceeds to ignore the environment about the flowing rewind time fly to restart the level...
Fun fact, OCD’s do not all need to be completed in the same run to be considered a full OCD, some are straight up impossible doing them in the same run
as someone who played the original game like 20 years ago at this point i gotta say this looks exactly like the orginal game... as someone who recently checked what the original game looked like this is a significant graphical update over the original :P (btw i know the original game came out in 2008 but since i played it through when it was released and haven't seen the game since it feels like 20 years)
im not gonna spoil it but if you think it looks the same, chapter 4 will blow your mind. do NOT watch someone's playthrough of it though. it's better to experience it for yourself.
Series please;o) Also could couple up great wirh Puddle for goo racing. And then turned into a roguelite for max replayability. Merch, Mechs... and world peace
I think world of goo 1 was the first game I bought online for the Wii, basically my first downloaded game, I loved it and messed aorund so long in it and I am so happy that it’s come back, it’s so chill
I remember this game! or the first one rather. if I recall, you have to play multiple times to get all the flags. for example, in the first level you cant get all 13 goo, and finish in 3 seconds in the same game. so one game you just worry about the 3 seconds and ignore the rest.
@@Pharozosthis seems really unnecessary to me? When you can just buy it from the website and not on epic avoider the launcher entirely and still get to experience what I am seeing is a great sequel of a beloved game?
@@JohnDoe-cj1dk I used to think that too. Once you are locked in to a "tech ecosystem" you will see the evil too. There is no reason to "lock" a game to one platform. Unless you want to manipulate the market to your favor. Steam makes no such deals.
@@Pharozos steam makes no such deals because they take 30% of all sales. It is not that crazy that some developers would rather release games on their own site.
I think the point of the game isn’t just to talk about attending to the environment, but specifically the act of incorporating recycling into businesses. The goo itself is garbage and leftovers, and the goal of the game is to recycle this garbage into useful structures. It’s not necessarily just about getting rid of the goo, but rather about taking advantage of the goo/pollution to create things. It’s a fascinating new perspective on the environment because rather than just saying: let’s completely get rid of pollution, it’s saying: let’s use pollution as a resource to reuse
World of Goo was the very first game I ever bought on Steam (before that, the platform was mainly a manager for games physically bought, say The Orange Box). This game was my very first incentive to like Steam as a whole. Ironically, they released the 2nd Opus... NOT on it.
1:30 The graphically improvement is insane? In what ways? The only thing is resolution. Otherwise it looks exactly the same as the first game. That being said, the first game is one of the best and good looking games out there! But Goo 1 and 2, then only graphically difference here is the resolution.
Yep, im disappointed on sight by how little it improves on the original presentation wise. Does nothing to take advantage of modern system in either visuals or physics. And while i didnt want it to be super graphics heavy, i expected some surprise...
@@TheBuildTeam That's not the topic what I want! Calling it insane improvement when it is only a upgrade from SD (Wii version) to HD is kind of insane itself, that' all!
Loved the first game but as soon as I heard "Epic Store Exclusive" I lost all interest in buying it. Too bad that the devs got greedy here but it is what it is there's plenty of other indie games to play with
It’s available on the Nintendo store and DRM free on their website. We support indie devs getting paid for their work, it’s a good thing epic is investing in indie games
@@OlexaYTI do like to support Indie games but I don't like to support Tim's shady business model. They clearly want you to buy on Epic because it's 4$ cheaper there and it might be a big deal for some people even if it seems small
It is the exact same price in both places for me, 29.99, so you may have a regional pricing scenario going on that is lowering the price on the Epic store. I’ve worked with a lot of developers that speak quite highly of Epic for helping get their game known and off the ground financially. Not to mention that Epic’s cut of revenue from sales is 12%, which seems high until you realize Steam takes 30% from developers. Neither platform is a golden child frankly, so I’ll support whatever supports the developer.