The first upgrade to
Naughty Dog’s Joel and Ellie’s First Adventure The Last of Us Part I has been made available. Developers report having issues and say they are closely watching the situation. However, a promotional effort does not work well with this strategy.
Sony has also long leaned toward PC, consistently introducing the most IP to new users, but not all initiatives get the kind of well-considered support that would enable them to generate the most revenue. We can fairly include
The Last of Us Part I in the category of works that either did not receive enough attention or were not handled by the right creators, which explains why we have seen so many unpleasant incidents since its release.
The game has “mostly negative” reviews right now on Steam, and additional materials show how much trouble customers who bought the post-apocalyptic journey for the launch face.
Last night, Naughty Dog published the first patch, which is only the first in a long line of upcoming patches. The team has already made known that the upcoming update will address additional issues.
“The Last of Us Part I has a fresh hotfix ready. This update primarily concentrates on performance and stability fixes, along with a few other minor upgrades. The development team is constantly working on a patch that will be released shortly and is closely monitoring player reports.
Because an entry about the celebration of the premiere and the new wallpaper surfaced on Twitter before the first patch, the studio did not completely adhere to the planned activities. The community, which would much rather implement specific The Last of Us Part I fixes, has automatically verified this strategy.
In the comments, you will find many bitter words directed at the authors and the port of The Last of Us Part I, and many players decided to refund.
“Why would I celebrate the launch of a port that rivals Batman Arkham Knight?”
“Now is the last bug or the last crash.”
“You really need to act fast. You are losing many PC users every second. We need a performance fix!”
“Yep, let’s celebrate a spoiled product. No problems here!”
“It’s hard to celebrate a game’s release when most people can’t play it because it crashes so often…”
“No thanks, I already got my refund.”
“Let’s celebrate a failed release.”