Exactly What It Says on the Tin: As the trailer puts it:.Earth-Shattering Kaboom: A planetary explosion occurs in the ending of Live Freemium or Die as a result of the Shopkeep selling Player a BFS so enormous and powerful that swinging it causes the world to spontaneously shatter.One NPC asks you to perform several mundane quests for him. Double Jump: The first game has a double-jump, which has to be bought, of course. Deconstruction Game: The game is all about satirizing overreliance on Downloadable Content.Cosmetic Award: "Awardments" are basically in-game achievements, and amusingly earning them also earns genuine achievements for the game on Steam and Xbox.Of course, you can buy the ending DLC pack. Cliffhanger: When entering the boss room for first time, credits roll.Not just a shout-out! It turns out your horse comes to the rescue in the final battle, and if it's not wearing the armor, the bad guy will easily kill it and then kill you. Canada, Eh?: The sole point of the Canadian Dialog pack in Live Freemium or Die is tacking a questioning "eh?" on the end of most dialogue sentences, alongside making it where the DLC store Apologises a Lot.Bribing Your Way to Victory: Buy DLC to skip the grinding! Buy DLC to trade your sword for a gun! Buy DLC to get armor for your horse! Etc.Big Damn Heroes: Your horse arrives just in time to save the day! Hopefully you've bought that horse armor DLC pack!.Better than a Bare Bulb: Yeah, pretty much everything in this game is Lampshaded in one way or another.Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: "That bad guy just stole Princess MacGuffin! You have to rescue her! Also, he murdered your uncle! You must get revenge! I think he might have peed in the town's water supply too!.Naturally, in keeping with the parody of shameless consumerism in modern video games, there is a Mission-Pack Sequel: Live Freemium or Die, which sends Player on an all-new quest to collect coins and spend them on even more DLC (oh, and save some villagers from a monster or something).Ī sequel of sorts was released in 2017 that parodies shameless consumerism even further: Loot Box Quest. Including things like "Pause" and " Walk left". In this game, everything needs to be purchased. DLC Quest is a satirical 2012 Indie Game for PC, Apple Macintosh, and Xbox Live Arcade that takes Downloadable Content to its logical extreme.
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