There's nothing quite like risking your own life along with all your friends for a couple of views and maybe even a follow. During my team's many expeditions to the old world, we've figured out a winning formula for views: catchy intro, someone dying on camera, plenty of screaming, and if we have time and the sanity to record an outro alongside one of the monstrosities, then that's an added bonus.
Usually, these clips go to waste, living out the rest of their lives in an untouched folder. But now, Content Warning's publisher, Landfall, is starting a lost footage project, and it welcomes any player to send over their clips. It links a waiver and application form to fill out in a <a data-analytics-id=«inline-link» href=«https://twitter.com/LandfallGames/status/1778392861798490528?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw%7Ctwcamp%5Etweetembed%7Ctwterm%5E1778392861798490528%7Ctwgr%5Ed1c124132cdbd3cae54c2227e1c34158bdc405ef%7Ctwcon%5Es1_&ref_url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.ign.com%2Farticles%2Fcontent-warning-lost-footage» target="_blank" data-url=«https://twitter.com/LandfallGames/status/1778392861798490528?ref_src=» https:>Twitter post
for you to read and sign if you want to. Footage must be unedited, but you can send over exported footage that didn't survive the round (ie, your whole group died trying to get a funny clip of a monster). The clips also don't have to be in English, but «content in languages we don't speak will be harder for us to evaluate (since we won't understand it), but it is still allowed,» Landfall points out in a Tweet.
If you do end up sending your videos to Landfall, your clips will be scattered into other players' games as discs for them to find and watch. So, who knows, you really could go viral or at least make a couple of people laugh.
One clip that I would consider sending off sees my group warily making our way through the old world. Between me muttering to myself, saying that I want to go home, and one friend's eternal optimism that everything's going to work out
Read more on pcgamer.com