Well, it only took basically forever, but the makers of PUBG have admitted that their game has, you know, some problems. PUBG, or Player Unknown's Battlegrounds is a PvP shooter where one hundred players fight in a battle royale, on a giant, shrinking map, where only one player can be left standing. Basically, it's one big deathmatch, and players can enter the match solo, or with a small team of up to four people, but no matter which way you go, the last person or team left alive wins the match.
You begin by parachuting from a plane onto the map, with the player deciding when to jump out, requiring you to make a split second decision depending on where you want to land. You start without any gear, so the beginning of each level is a scramble for weapons. Once you're armed, it's time to to start killing, whether that means running people over, sniping them, moving from building to building exterminating everyone you come across or hiding out behind cover and shooting people in the back. Gamers have been loving this game since release, but there have been tons of problems plaguing the experience, with the Xbox One version being particularly bad. Finally, we are getting some movement. An admission, and even better, we have a concrete site and a plan of action from the makers of the popular battle royale shooter to get this game in the shape it should have been in months ago.
Here's the statement from the website, that encapsulates the problems and the proposed solutions:
This is a phrase that we’ve been hearing a lot lately. Bugs, performance problems,
and quality-of-life issues have been limiting PUBG's true potential, and you want it fixed.
So we think it's time to do something about it.
"FIX PUBG" is a months-long campaign to deliver the changes and improvements that
you've been asking for. We've created a roadmap with specific details about our plans, and
we intend to update it as we go, checking things off as we deliver on our promises.
i like pubg
i like pubg
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