

You earn so many new outfits by completing tasks, allowing you to change so. Also, the character customization adds tons of charm.

Even driving the husk of a car with nothing but wheels feels a lot better than expected. Totally Reliable Delivery Service delivers some goofy laughs with family or friends as you fumble your way to a destination without completely destroying your cargo, but like a package that’s. It makes you feel that nothing can or should be taken too seriously. Do you agree with s 4-star rating Check out what 30,047 people have written so far, and share your own experience. These can lead to some truly inventive mismatched characters and lends the game a sense of personality. The low-poly look suits Totally Reliable Delivery Service. Try to deliver packages quickly in a big sandbox with clunky physics and wobbly characters. Each objective gifts you with new character customisation tools. Perhaps the best part of Totally Reliable Delivery Service is found in the mission rewards. But this only really extends its playfulness to a session or two. This is less of an issue in co-op, which provides a lot more fun as you both desperately try to fulfil the requirements of these missions. Repeating these same missions over and over grows old very fast, never truly embracing the sense of fun it’s so desperately trying to achieve. Totally Reliable Delivery Service is simple enough to get to grips with, but often frustrating in its delivery down to the physics it relies upon. It’s a game so doggedly determined to annoy you with its infuriating control scheme, shocking graphics and poor implementation of.
TOTALLY RELIABLE DELIVERY SERVICE REVIEW TRIAL
While missions where you’re transporting explosives should be a fun use of the physics, they instead become a tedious case of trial and error as a simple tap can cause the barrel to explode and the mission to restart. Totally Reliable Delivery Service feels like a bit of a prank. The missions on display here are basic and never embrace the fun nature that the game is trying to portray.
