T he open world is a big toy box to goof off in. Completing missions rewards you with new cosmetics to outfit your character with and money to spend on vehicle skins. The game’s world is completely open from the very beginning with no restrictions, you are free to waddle around at your leisure interacting with objects, driving vehicles and taking on deliveries. The key is to utilize physics in a way that helps you accomplish your goal. They flail around with the physics of the game. Each arm can grab and lift objects individually, but you don’t directly control your arms. You can run, jump and flop on the ground. While the controls are simple, the game is intentionally clunky. It is meant to be played with friends either online or up to four-person local split-screen Gameplay Totally Reliable Delivery Service can be played solo but that is missing the entire point. Simply controlling your character is half the challenge as your meaty little porter arms flail around bonelessly. Vehicles of all shapes and sizes litter the world and they can help or hamper your deliveries, or you can just drive them off-ramps and into your friends. Alternatively, you can ignore the missions altogether and just goof around the open-world sandbox. You will take on various delivery missions, some are based on speed while others simply require you to deliver a package intact. Totally Reliable Delivery Service is a wacky physics game where you and a few friends struggle to control chubby delivery folks with some hilariously intense butt jiggle physics. Joseph Pugh conducted this review on a standard Xbox One console. It releases on the Xbox One, PlayStation 4, Nintendo Switch, The Epic Store and Mobile Devices on April 1st. Totally Reliable Delivery Service is a physics-based sandbox game for 1-4 players.
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