Demos have been gone so long there will be younger readers who never really got comfy with them in the first place, but a some news from big PC publishers this week shows that the oldest (and maybe best) way of selling a video game is making a comeback.
OK, so demos never entirely disappearedāand their spirit, if nothing else, has been kept alive with stuff like Steamās free weekendsābut for the most part, the idea that studios would break little chunks of their game off and give them to you to justā¦play, for free, seemed long gone.
https://lastchance.cc/stop-preordering-video-games-1713802537%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
There are many reasons for this, some easier to parse than others, but maybe those are on the wane, because this week weāve seen some big games on the PC suddenly get proper, old-fashioned demos. No strings, no limited deals, you didnāt even need to buy a magazine. Theyāre just free to download and free to play.
Halo Wars 2 got things started a few days ago, with a demo that lets you play the first campaign mission and try out the gameās weird card-based multiplayer mode.Iām not the biggest fan of Halo Wars 2, but a free demo is a free demo, and is a good way to see if youāre a fan of its breezy approach to the RTS.
And now, today, Civ VI has dropped a demo of its own. It gives you 60 turns playing as China, and while 60 turns isnāt much in the grand scheme of Civ VI, itās still enough to poke your mouse around almost all of the gameās features and systems, from district building to spamming horsemen.
https://lastchance.cc/civilization-vi-the-kotaku-review-1788213327%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E