“Disaster Report 4” turns its gaze to what could, for a time, be viewed as a window on how we might survive less immediate dangers.
“Disaster Report 4: Summer Memories” has players take part in a recovery effort. Image: Courtesy of Granzella/NIS America via AFP Relaxnews
Even though the COVID-19 has become a global preoccupation — and rightly so — it has not erased other catastrophic events from existence. In fact, “Disaster Report 4: Summer Memories”, the latest entry to a two-decade-old franchise about extreme event survival, was initially delayed and then canceled outright in response to 2011’s undersea earthquake, whose resultant tsunami caused enormous damage to the Tohoku region, the city of Sendai and the Fukushima power plant.
Visiting a new city for a job interview, but caught up in a massive earthquake, players work with up to 60 other characters, teaming up to help them ride out the aftershocks, escape fires, avoid building collapses and find stable ground and essential supplies.
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