One key feature throughout gameplay is the Zombo Point, found and unlocked randomly through events and scavenging missions. One ultimate mode, K*E*P*A, lays for the truly hardcore challengers. Additional modes build on this with increased difficulty and varying trip lengths, unlocked through completing previous modes. The basic modes are a standard 15-day trip to Canada, featuring random characters, custom characters only, or rare characters only. Multiple game modes are available to play and unlock. The game also features rare special characters which have their own unique boosts or equipment.ĭefinitely not copyrighted. Making custom characters is more important than simply creating your family for giggles some perks and traits will only appear on characters if they have been custom created. While these will still appear in game with some randomized attributes, their core settings will remain the same. You can create up to 80 custom characters, each with their own appearance, perk, and trait. Unlike its predecessors, DRTC supports both randomly generated characters and custom characters. Along the way, the party must scavenge for and manage supplies, endure sieges, trade at markets, and improve their skills in order to cross the snowy border. The player(s) control a party of one to four characters, who travel northward from Florida toward Canada to flee the zombie apocalypse. While DRTC as a whole has been extremely satisfying, the greatest hope I had for the Switch edition left me slightly disappointed.ĭeath Road to Canada is a modern take on The Oregon Trail, similar in vein to Organ Trail. When I heard its announcement for console – particularly the Switch – I was thrilled for the local (and mobile) couch co-op potential. And so it is that the lure of the deadly open road has always called me in each inspired video game iteration.ĭeath Road to Canada is not a new game, having debuted on PC in 2016 and having sat on my Steam Wishlist for nearly as long. In fact, my first gaming memory is sitting around a small, monochrome, portable TV with my parents, trekking down the trail and shooting buffalo as only a toddler can. The Oregon Trail has always held a special charm for many aged gamers (a group I reluctantly include myself in), many of whom played their first computer games in black and green. By Jaime Skelton (MissyS), Editor-in-Chief
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