![]() ![]() Finally, the player uses Dusty to clean up the scene as best they can. Then, in true brutal game fashion, Dusty can eat these enemies to gain “blood power” for special skills. Players use Dusty to hack everyday objects to damage and/or kill enemies. Justice Sucks builds its entire gameplay model on kill and cleanup. If I had to describe this game to someone, my best attempt would be to call it a mix of Home Alone, any Watch Dogs game, and Hotline Miami. During the rest of the game, Dusty works through levels with its digital, muscle-bound alter ego Sexy McClean to level up and save the family from a corrupt CEO. This puts the family at risk, as a big electronics corporation seeks out this cleaner bot to decommission it. ![]() In Justice Sucks, the player controls an advanced robotic floor cleaner (yes, just like those round ones you can get in stores today.) This servant, Dusty McClean, lives a simple life serving a family until one day gaining a form of alternate sentience while defending its home from robbers. However, once that first minute begins, all guesswork goes away. Without seeing any cover art or screenshots, Justice Sucks, developed by Melbourne-based company Samurai Punk, could be mistaken for any number of different styles or genres of games. Though its repetitive mission types and lack of agency detract from its overall experience, this game provides enough laughable game moments in a compact time frame to make this a casual weekend experience. In the world of tactical action games, Justice Sucks is loud and unapologetically video game-y. Justice Sucks belongs to the latter category. There are games designed for competition, games that tell riveting stories, and games that exist purely to entertain. One thing I find amazing about the video game industry in 2022 is the variety available for our diverse community. A tactical stealth game that offers simple fun but fails to polish ![]()
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