![]() We actually considered the eight hours quite lenient - we started with 24 hours but that felt a bit too restrictive: you'd end the same time of day you ended the game yesterday. "You can leave it running overnight and have a fresh mind to see the results in the morning. "The arbitrary amount we shipped with was eight hours, a perfect time to sleep on the game you just finished we thought," co-director Marcin Surma said. So, what's going on? I spoke to the game's developers to find out what they were trying to achieve. "There's a thin line between artistic expression and wasting my time," wrote redditor Shaamaan on the Superhot sub. As more people find the ending, more people are having their say about the rights and wrongs of it. Meanwhile, Superhot: MCD has a "very positive" user review rating on Steam, but some negative reviews are starting to hit the game's page that are highlighting the ending situation. Still, there's been an interesting reaction to this ending, speculation as to why it's in the game, what the developer is trying to do with it, and plenty of opinion on whether it's clever - or just plain annoying. Interestingly, Superhot: MCD shipped with this lock set to eight hours, but the game was patched to reduce it to two-and-a-half hours (this patch is still not available on all platforms, so some on console still have to wait eight hours). If you want to see how this looks, the video below reveals it. There is no other in-game way to continue. But once you do trigger the ending, which I won't spoil, the player is forced to leave the game running for two-and-a-half hours in order for Superhot to "recover deleted data". There's no real way to "beat" Superhot: Mind Control Delete, in the sense that players can continue to play it for as long as they like before triggering the ending. It's called Mind Control Delete, after all.Īnd then we get to the ending. There's a sense throughout that Superhot itself feels like the player is an addict who struggles to let go. I'll keep the spoilers very light here, but essentially, Superhot: Mind Control Delete, a time-bending puzzle shooter that came out on 16th July 2020, has a running theme of guilt - a guilt the player feels for wanting to play more of the game. If you think 2.5 hours is long, the original wait time was 8hrs!Īfter the game recovers the data, you will be awarded the achievement.The new Superhot game does something a little different: it makes you wait hours after the ending before you can play the game again. I stayed up to 2am to get it the legit way. You will now have to either wait 2hrs and 30mins of real-world time, or use an app to speed the game up.Ĭheat Engine's speedhack works from what I've been told. ![]() Interacting with the final node will show a prompt saying that it is "Recovering Deleted Data" with a countdown timer at the bottom. ![]() Interacting with it will prompt a message saying "Scanning system memory for recoverable data".Īfter it finishes scanning, a line will show above, leading you to another node.Īfter it finishes scanning, another line will show up leading you to the final node. Once you see the red rectangle, keep traveling to the left and you will eventually go back to the triangle, but there should now be a white line going up.įollow the white line, and you will eventually be led to a node that looks like a door. After another 15 chants, a red rectangle will appear around the triangle.
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