I have strangely fond memories of Kingpin: Life of Crime, a 1999, vaguely dieselpunk-y FPS that I played far, far too young. It was ultraviolent, ultra-sweary, and had a light smattering of RPG elements that made it feel very novel to me back when I played it. I was pretty excited, then, when 3D Realms announced a remaster called Kingpin: Reloaded in 2020.
After three years—including a long period where it felt like the project had dropped off the face of the Earth—that remaster finally released last Monday and, well, oh no. Buyers of the game on Steam have not responded well to the game, which currently sits at a 30% «Mostly Negative» score on the platform's user review system. From the sounds of it, it's another case of a remaster releasing before it's fully baked, much like what happened with The Outer Worlds: Spacer's Choice Edition earlier this year.
«Released in unfinished state,» reads a review from Steam user skeep, who complains of mouse difficulties and «stutters everywhere,» as well as bemoaning the lack of mod support. Another, from Mayron Luctus, calls the remaster «clunky» and «buggy» with blood that «looks like watered strawberry jam.» Luctus adds that users can get a better experience by buying the original game—also available on Steam and GOG—and modding it.
One user, Chadaclysm, just cuts straight to the point: «Is it too late to hand this over to Nightdive?»
So Kingpin: Reloaded seems to have come out the door in a bit of a state, which I can't help but feel is becoming a bit of a familiar tale with all sorts of remakes and remasters these days (the GTA Trilogy Definitive Edition is still absolutely not the definitive version of those games, for instance). But to be fair to Kingpin: Reloaded studio
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