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Outlaws

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Outlaws

Mar 31, 1997

Main game

3.59 average rating based on 64 ratings

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Outlaws is a first-person shooter released by LucasArts in 1997. It uses a Wild West setting. It follows retired U.S. Marshal James Anderson, who seeks to bring justice to a gang of criminals who killed his wife and kidnapped his daughter. The game is a first-person shooter. Players control the character as he utilizes several American Old West weapons and items, such as a rifle, shotgun, dynamite and revolver. The player can activate the lantern inventory item to lighten dark areas, and use a shovel in specific areas to dig holes.
Developers
LucasArts
Publishers
Disney Interactive, LucasArts
Platforms
PC (Microsoft Windows)
Genres
Shooter
Themes
Action, Historical
Steam
View on Steam
Release Dates
Mar 31, 1997 (North_America)
PC (Microsoft Windows)
1997 (Europe)
PC (Microsoft Windows)
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User Stats
221
In Collection
23
Wish Listed
6
Playing
81
Backlogged
How Long Is Outlaws?
Main story: 6.0 hours
Main + extras: 6.5 hours
Total completions: 2
Related Content
Aleosha
Aleosha gave Oct 21, 2023
Aleosha gave Oct 21, 2023
Aleosha's review of Outlaws
This review is for the PC (Microsoft Windows) version

I planned to play this game for such a long time. After all, I greatly enjoyed Dark Forces, and I just finished Doom and Doom 2 without save/loading much. But this game is such a disappointment.

The real problem is the shooting. Enemies can finish you in one or two shots. And since your weapons aren't very accurate, you don't have much health, and there are a lot of enemies, you end up dying a lot. And I mean a lot. The "Official Strategy Guide" even proposes to always crouch and corner snipe your enemies. Fun! enter image description here

It has these mechanics of manually reloading your weapons bullet by bullet. But this is badly animated. Forgive Me Father had similar lacking animation, but there I believe it was more a matter of style. But that's not the real problem. enter image description here

The game problems become even more apparent once you get the scope. It allows you to snipe out enemies alright, which for '97 is quite something. But your bullets won't fly where you want them to. Sometimes they would pass straight through an enemy, despite you having your crosshair right at him, while other times, you'll kill an enemy right away, although your …

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I planned to play this game for such a long time. After all, I greatly enjoyed Dark Forces, and I just finished Doom and Doom 2 without save/loading much. But this game is such a disappointment.

The real problem is the shooting. Enemies can finish you in one or two shots. And since your weapons aren't very accurate, you don't have much health, and there are a lot of enemies, you end up dying a lot. And I mean a lot. The "Official Strategy Guide" even proposes to always crouch and corner snipe your enemies. Fun! enter image description here

It has these mechanics of manually reloading your weapons bullet by bullet. But this is badly animated. Forgive Me Father had similar lacking animation, but there I believe it was more a matter of style. But that's not the real problem. enter image description here

The game problems become even more apparent once you get the scope. It allows you to snipe out enemies alright, which for '97 is quite something. But your bullets won't fly where you want them to. Sometimes they would pass straight through an enemy, despite you having your crosshair right at him, while other times, you'll kill an enemy right away, although your bullet should have been nowhere near.

enter image description here

Every level ends abruptly with a cutscene as you kill the next outlaw. The problem is, they are very hard to distinguish. And if you didn't find all the secrets on that level—tough luck!

The Sawmill is probably one of the worst levels I've seen since Redneck Rampage. They tried to implement a trolley puzzle, where you need to change tracks to find all the gears. But instead of tracks, it's a water stream with a current. So you have to shoot the switches, with janky shooting controls. Absolute disaster. I mean, the Mine is also bad, a multi-level maze with some not-obvious jumps. But I still think that the Sawmill is worse.

enter image description here

Now, let's talk about the final level. For some reason, the authors decided to make it a "capture level", that is, a level where you get captured and therefore start barehanded. But that's not the issue. Nor is the issue that you need to shoot a haystack rope multiple times; there's a slight visual cue of rope fraying, but not enough. Fair.

There's a tile in the library. You need to step on it. And it opens a bookcase, which closes after a few seconds. And inside that bookcase, there is an unlit fireplace, which you need to interact with to open a hidden passage behind another fireplace in the library. That's it. That's the problem. Had to check with the guide this once, because I was pretty damn sure some script bugged on me, or I needed to blow something up with dynamite.

And you get the final weapon, Gatling Gun, just before the boss. There are literally half a dozen enemies you can use this weapon on. Gatling is interesting because with it, you cannot move at all. And you also can't reload it. Once you run out of ammo, that's it. enter image description here

Can't believe this is a game from the same people that worked on Dark Forces. Who thought that having three different shotguns is a good idea? enter image description here

Speaking of Dark Forces, I'm surprised that the authors went back to the key mechanics. "Find a bronze key, open a door, find the silver key...". I mean, they got it right previously, and now they ruined it. Whoever puts a key in the back of a warehouse?!

The only two spectacular things about that game are the cutscenes and the music. The music is a clear homage to Spaghetti Westerns, and while the cutscenes mostly show you the death of your current enemy and the appearance of the next one, at least they add some character to what otherwise would be a subpar shooter.

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giopep
giopep gave Dec 5, 2024
giopep gave Dec 5, 2024
giopep's review of Outlaws
This review is for the PC (Microsoft Windows) version

A bizzarre, experimental shooter that’s part FPS, part graphic adventure, part crazy shit. The level design, the set pieces and so many gameplay elements are all focused on recreating various western clichés and they work damn well. Sure, there’s a couple of stages that haven’t aged well, their maps are complex to the point of becoming boring, but the style is great, the highs (the town, the train, the final assault) are amazing and overall it’s a fun ride.