Cahors Sunset Download Cracked Pc
- lawslesdaykindnena
- Jun 6, 2019
- 7 min read
Updated: Mar 15, 2020
About This Game Cahors has always been your life; you never had any interest in leaving. The small French town is the landscape of all your memories: the sweet and the bitter.Cahors Sunset is a light-RPG in which you control the decisions of an old French man. In this game your goal is try to keep the main character alive for as long as you can through the decisions you make each month. Every action you take has an effect on your character and not all choices are good; many contain unwanted side effects. The idea is to balance the positive and negative effects of each action you take and the impacts they have on the old man's health. 7ad7b8b382 Title: Cahors SunsetGenre: Indie, RPG, SimulationDeveloper:LocomotivahPublisher:LocomotivahRelease Date: 12 Jan, 2015 Cahors Sunset Download Cracked Pc Maybe it was the beautiful violin soundtrack, but this was a relatively emotional & unique experience, which i wouldn't have expected from a CYOA game about finance management.I do wish Toulouse had played better, I do not blame them for my death, in the end it was the increase in medicines pricing & having just bought & read the newspaper my lifestyle could not be sustained; I hope Matteo can find someone else to go the restaurant with as I died without being able to attend.. Hm. Well, I don't know what to say, really.Cahors Sunset does contain a nice idea at the core, but, this is not enough to sell the game to me. As a matter of fact, it's boring to me. And it's incredibly... how do I phrase it? It's just not a good game. The random events seem to be bad for the protagonist in 90% of the cases. And the nice background photos do nothing, since the decision cards cover up about half of the screen.So, in essence... I don't even think that 1,99\u20ac are worth it. I would have expected a little more. And that is sad.. Worth a single play-through, at a < $1 price point for about an hour of fun. You should also like text-based multiple choice games. An interest in history helps, as each turn represents a real-world month and you're presented with a factoid culled from that month's 1960's French history.I got through the entire story on my first try, by picking the best long-term choices (i.e. the ones that gave me the highest aggregate point total) rather than worrying about one stat getting too high or too low. However, the game becomes more punishing every year, to the point where your last few months are spent in a desperate attempt not to fall too low in any one stat, leading to choices that fix short-tern problems but inevitably doom you....much like real life.. I have a review for this game, but I'm going to type a wall of text here in hopes that you can't see my review. Because I think there's a major point to this game that you can't ever have someone tell you about. I think you have to experience it.. I think you have to feel it. If you can come to that point on your own, it's a beautiful and amazingly well designed game for a very low price. The problem is, in my review I'm going to spoil what I believe the "secret" point of this game is. I know some of you will click it anyways and miss out. But I'm challenging you. Is $2 really so much to pay to believe in another human being? Just please. Trust me. Don't read the rest of this review until after you've at least played through the game once on your own. For those of you that insist on seeing it now, or for those of you who have played through once and are back now to read this, here is my review: This game is magnificent. It's not amazing as far as gameplay, sound, graphics.. No. It's clearly not meant to be that type of game, but is any visual novel really about the visuals? They're just an accentuation for the story you're being immersed in. The point of the game is the reason why I love it. I played the game for about 45 minutes. Just one play through. The first ten to fifteen minutes, I was treating it like another silly game I didn't care about.. Halfway through I started really getting interested in the story. It hooks you in and goes from using third person references to saying "You did this. You remember this. You were sad because." ... without you noticing, the game goes from telling you a story about someone else to engaging you in a story about yourself. At some point, I think year seven or so. The stories stop. The family history goes no further. You learn about your parents, how they met. You learn about yourself. You learn about your brothers, and how you struggled. You learn about your first love and how she was your pillar when times got hard. When times became harder she was only there for you more. And then suddenly the history stops. The GAMEPLAY stops. And you're asked.. there really a reason to balance your life? To prolong your suffering and loneliness? To keep thinking about things. To keep hoping for another love as deep and fulfilling as the one you lived. And at that point I realized. This game lies to you. The game tells you the point is to keep yourself alive as long as possible. And yes, you can do that for the leaderboards if you like. You can be a robot and experience life in the most optimal way for survival. Or you can do what you feel is right as you come to terms with death. In my own final days, I visited many loved relatives and friends. Put aside money for my children, even when I didn't have any. Went out to theatre and surrounded myself with people I cared for. People stole from me and silly things would bother me.. And one day the money ran out and I died. I cried a little bit but.. I died living to the fullest. And that. That is what I think this game is truly about. It's not a grind to live as long as you can. It's only a grind for as long as it takes for you to realize that grinding your life away is NOT the life you should want to live. At that point the game teaches you something deep about yourself and allows you to come to terms with human mortality. For that reason I believe this game is magnificent. But who knows. I might be seeing magic where there is nothing. Perhaps it wasn't their intention. Regardless, I'm very glad for what I got out of this game.. I'm kind of sad I would have missed it if it wasn't so cheap. 10 out of 10 . Thank you to the people who worked on this gem.. Well, that's a cheap game so I guess you shouldn't expect much in the first place.Unfortunately I'm giving this thumbs up not because I enjoyed it very much but mainly because there are enough bad reviews already and this game is not actually bad. It's not too good either.The idea behind the game is nice, that's a very light life-simulator of an old man, you make decisions and and they affect your stats, and you have to raise your stats as much as possible. That's pretty much it.Very light and casual, and maybe you should buy it on sale of you may enjoy this type of game.Unfortunately the game doesn't live to its potential, which it does have, in my opinion. Every game, as simple and minimal as it is, and with the weakest (or complete lack of) gameplay, can still leave a positive impression with a good story.Cahors Sunset does have a story, and even though the game is pretty much a slideshow of pictures it could quite much get to me completely with a good story.The opportunity wasn't taken, though, and the story is rather generic, with short, laconic sentences which don't really get to you. The choices you're making, also don't really make up to one whole story, and actually have not much of a connection to each other, but they quickly become a random mess of events which in more "advanced" levels even start repeating itself.Well, shame on me, as this is a 'thumbs up' review and I mainly \u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665\u2665ed about the game.I still believe that the concept is good and that it's OK for casual sessions of 5-10 minutes if you're like me and usually don't have HOURS to spend playing.And as I said in the beginning, this game is not actually BAD. It just doesn't go far beyond this level, even though I feel it could. Which is also a shame.. "Old age is just a record of one's whole life." - Muhammad AliBoy, wasn't that accurate and... depressing... in the right way, I guess. Okay, give me a moment to arrange an actual review from the crippling strike of empathy that I just took to my guts.Cahors Sunset is a unique mini game that invites you to become an elderly French man named Valentin Puget. You live and recount your life's tale, alongside witnessing many political changes of France's own history. Your main goal is to keep the old man alive as long as possible by making everyday choices like either drinking a fine wine, or simply visiting your doctor. You have to keep an eye on his social, financial, psychological and physical abilities to present a well balanced life. As months pass and the old man ages even more, he suffers certain ailments and penalties to all his stats. Every single thing that you choose to do carry both positive and negative consequences on different assets. Also, you are the object of happenstances of life that you have no control over, just as real life.Narration is elegant and realistic, shedding some light to the story of a life and an era while asking the player to emphasize himself\/herself with someone that resides in the winter of a life. Challenges of being old, vulnerable and fragile; living side by side with the possibility that it might be your last day on earth is heavy to say the least. You keep living, and living, and living... and at some point, you ask yourself: is this living?The game leaves you with a sudden urge to stop whatever you are doing, pick up the phone and call your grandparents; just so you can share something, anything with them while it still matters. It leaves you with a short, but strong experience that you can benefit from as a humane virtue.Please also check out Lady Storyteller's Curator page here - follow for regular updates on reviews for other games!
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