It works as intended as a device on its own, but can sometimes fail to correctly send inputs if something unexpected happens, like the previously
mentioned game crashes.
Not exact matches
There's a Pure Skill section as well that turns off upgrades and limits the entire field to the same car, ensuring that it's just skill which determines the winner — or whoever is most vicious when it comes to battering everyone else off the road, although at this point it's worth
mentioning that the
crash physics are far more forgiving in Horizon than previous
games, so somebody slamming into online now doesn't equal race over for you.
One thing to point out, I have read a few reviews and some people on the Xbox version have
mentioned a save bug and control issues — I never had any of these on the PS4, I was on the Pro, as my saves worked fine — it never
crashed and the control mechanism for the robot and aiming is a bit fiddly (no free aim, locked to eight directional aiming) and it does glitch out if you aim too close to an object but it never broke the
game or caused an un-fair death.
In many interviews (including on an episode of G4's «Icons», as seen above), he had
mentioned about how the
game was «the» thing to blame when the video
game industry started to
crash.
Bethesda did, however,
mention that it was looking into the
game crashes which hints that another patch (patch 1.3) may be the actual fix most are waiting for.
It recognized the single most damaging flaw of XBLIG, which was the loss of consumer confidence in the platform (similar to the video
game crash of 1983 as
mentioned before), and addressed it.
Mention the video
game crash of the early eighties to a British thirty - something and you're...