![]() ![]() Instructional videos of your own are allowed. #5 Self Promotion -Feel free to share any videos, pictures, website links in individual posts, but please don't self-promote without asking the mods first. #4 Deals & Conversions - Use the megathread to discuss these. Tech support posts will be removed during the week If and only if your question hasn't been answered, post your question on WEEKENDS only. #3 FAQ & Tech Support - Please look in the FAQ (top bar on desktop, to right on mobile) or search the sub before your post. #2 Be Civil - Discussions are perfectly fine, just follow the reddiquette. Less vent exploration, more intricate teeth surgeries next time.Xbox Game Pass discussions Subreddit Rules When Surgeon Simulator 2 focuses on the surgeries and your own skill as a player, it’s a lot of fun, but it feels like it often avoids that in an effort to become an entirely different type of game. Still, even though I’m sure that’s not the right way to play, I can’t help feeling that bringing a friend along wouldn’t have redeemed the bland puzzles and simple surgeries either. As a billy-no-mates, I did it all on my own. I can imagine playing Surgeon Simulator 2 with your friends is a lot more enjoyable than playing on your own and probably negates some of the more tedious elements of the game. ![]() Combine that with a short runtime and I felt like I was done with Surgeon Simulator 2 before it even had the chance to start. There’s no real drive to revisit the game because the surgeries themselves are so easy - the only challenge comes from finding equipment and moving through the hospital, which feels more like Handyman Simulator or Walk Through Rooms Simulator. Toning down the original’s mechanics may initially seem necessary for facilitating cooperative play this time around, but it also leaves the game with a lack of replay value. History repeats itself and you lose another Bob, making you question who the joke is really supposed to be on. After completing the same puzzles in the same space and wondering whether you really need puzzles in your surgeon simulator, you get ready to operate again. This is all part of the fun so you smile and restart, noting to move the tomahawk next time. It doesn’t matter though - the syringe goes into Bob, but Surgeon Simulator 2 bugs out, has a tantrum and doesn’t register it, leaving our hapless guinea pig to bleed to death. You fling the tomahawk aside with some impressive throwing chops (seriously, you should consider that as a career when this surgeon thing inevitably fails) and manage to use the syringe to save Bob’s life before it’s too late. This time it’s a simple arm transplant, but instead of slowly sawing Bob’s arm off to keep his blood loss to a minimum, you’ve learnt that it’s quicker to simply rip his arm from its socket like a piece of morbid Lego and deal with the consequences later.Īs Bob rapidly starts to bleed out, you lunge for a blood-stopping syringe, accidentally grabbing the tomahawk you stupidly didn’t move before the operation began. ![]() After running around the lab solving puzzles and gaining access to the body parts and tools you’ll need, you’re finally ready to start the surgery.
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