![]() The game starts five years in the past, as we see Torque at a Baltimore prison with his best friend Miles. Go PC for this game, and absolutely do not skip it because it manages to improve on just about every aspect of the first game, even managing to make Torque a genuine character. While a lack of visibility helped create atmosphere in the first game, its just a hindrance in the second, especially with the shift to a real world city instead of a secluded prison. The console games upped the darkness significantly to the point that its hard to make out what’s happening without jacking up the brightness on your TV, but the PC game has a brighter default that makes things far easier to make out so you can actually appreciate what the team made and did. While The Suffering‘s PC version was fundamentally the same game but with mouse controls, the PC version for Ties That Bind feels like a completely different game at times. ![]() That sort of turn around time is ridiculous, especially for a series this ambitious, but they managed it…sort of. Ties That Bind was released less than two years after the first game in September 2005. ![]()
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March 2023
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