God Save Birmingham Sparks Controversy: Is This the Next “Too Good to Be True” Zombie Game?

Gamers are blown away by the stunning zombie world, but suspicions run high. Many compare it to The Day Before, yet Ocean Drive Studio insists everything shown “will be in the game.” The developers are adamant: this is not another fake.

 

Ocean Drive Studio’s new project has set the internet abuzz since day one, thanks to its eye-popping visuals and immersive gameplay. However, after the fiasco of The Day Before—one of the most infamous flops in recent memory—players are wary of post-apocalyptic survival games that look too good to be true. Is God Save Birmingham just smoke and mirrors? The creators have stepped up to say: not every ambitious project is a scam.

Remember, The Day Before spent years hyping up a revolutionary game, promising a richly detailed world and complex survival systems. But after all that anticipation, it was released in December 2023 in a disastrous state and was pulled from Steam after only four days. Ever since, any game with a slick trailer and big promises faces intense scrutiny, sometimes for good reason.

“Even internally, we knew people would say this is too good to be true. But the trailer shows exactly what we aim to build,” said Jungsoo Lee, head of publishing at Ocean Drive Studio, to IGN. Lee said the team was only “a little” surprised that a YouTube video titled “Another Scam” racked up nearly a million views, but he reassures everyone that everything in the trailer will be in the final game.

For now, Ocean Drive Studio—known for Lost Eidolons: Veil of the Witch—is determined to win over a skeptical audience and prove that God Save Birmingham is the real deal.

Source: 3djuegos

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