![]() ![]() The pack is sold under the Interplay label, though, with the apparent approval of the Redneck Rampage developer, Xatrix Entertainment. It consists of twelve new levels developed by a company called Sunstorm Interactive. Still here? Well, if you really want to know more, then here goes: Suckin' Grits is a cheap add-on to Redneck Rampage that requires a full install of the original to play. ![]() I might have a duty to write this review, but you really shouldn't waste your time reading it. Now that you know where I'm coming from, skip on down to the bottom for all you need to know about this title. It's just more of the same old, same old that we've all seen way too much of. And the aforementioned add-on, titled Suckin' Grits on Route 66, does nothing to change my mind. Seen in the light of early 1998, however, it is. I wasn't exactly a fan of the original game, it being repetitve and heavily dependent on that one-note joke, but since it came out in early 1997, it wasn't completely execrable. So it doesn't exactly impress me that there's now an official, Interplay-distributed add-on pack for the Build engine-based Redneck Rampage. ![]() It's been more than a month since Quake II re-upped the ante. It's been more than a year since Quake set the standards for the 3D shooter. Sure, Duke Nukem 3D was a blast, and so was Blood, as a matter of fact. One thing that drives me nuts about the computer gaming business is the way that every company out there milks their customers for all that they're worth. ![]()
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