
All of the above isn't particularly challenging and mostly serves as a bit of flavor that helps sell the game's setting. When you arrive, Trudograd merely has to deal with the harsh realities of nuclear winter, the complete lack of a functional government, and the looming threat of a barbarian invasion.Īs a result, instead of managing your radiation levels, you'll be dealing with Trudograd's inhospitable weather, which translates into stacking cold resistance, spending some time by the fire, and consuming an occasional alcoholic beverage. Your quest for this ultimate tool of overcompensation leads you to Trudograd, a bustling by post-apocalyptic standards city that somehow managed to avoid getting bombed back into the stone age.
#ATOM RPG TRUDOGRAD HAISHEN CRACK#
Your character, who just happens to be the star agent of the Soviet take on the Brotherhood of Steel, gets the first crack at finding that gun. The proposed solution for dealing with this thing is to shoot it out of the sky with the biggest gun available. Should this asteroid arrive unmolested, it's predicted to wipe the human race off the face of the planet for good. The previous game ended with a sentient mushroom warning you about a massive asteroid, that may or may not be an alien spaceship, on a collision course with Earth. However, following an extended early access phase, Trudograd became more of a full-blown sequel that will take you somewhere in the vicinity of 30 hours to complete.Īnd if you'd like to know where exactly Trudograd fits into the Fallout family of RPGs, you can now check out our review below. The game was originally envisioned as a standalone expansion for the similarly post-apocalyptic ATOM RPG that launched back in 2018.


ATOM RPG: Trudograd is a post-apocalyptic RPG inspired by such venerable classics as Wasteland and Fallout, but with a Soviet coat of paint.
