
Interactive EnvironmentsĪlthough the inclusion of various Borderlands universe and history items are well thought out, there is very little attempt to work these items into the story. Borderlands games are not known for this as much.
#Tales from the borderlands game over stuck tv#
However, previous Telltale games were taken from comic book stories and TV shows where moral ambiguity is vitally important. This is one of the hallmarks of the Telltale games and it is disappointing that it is missing from Tales from the Borderlands. There is no appearance from the normally expected morally ambiguous decision making that is normally associated with Telltale games. It is, unfortunately, a bit too late to salvage the chapter. It is only towards the end of the chapter that some semblance of a story appears. Unlike previous Telltale games where the dialogue is the major part of the story, the dialogue in this first chapter of Tales from the Borderlands just seems to be there. There really isn’t anything of substance added through the dialogue to the story. The dialogue is thin and has the appearance of filler space. Nor does the dialogue really add anything to the game. The dialogue through the game is filled with anecdotes and wisecracks, but none of it really relates to the game. Rhys gets implanted with a new Hyperion chip from a former Hyperion scientist. Rhys and Vaughn (Rhys’s Hyperion friend) and Fiona and Sasha, her sister, go after Bossonova after he steals the case with the money. A criminal boss named Bossonova is introduced during the story, as well as a vault hunter named Zer0. Unbeknownst to August (who also doesn’t know the key is a fake), Rhys steals $10 million from Hyperion and a car from Vasquez to get the vault key. Taken from Borderlands 1, 2, and Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel, Tales from the Borderlands features Rhys, a Hyperion employee with a grudge against his boss Vasquez (voiced by a hysterical Patrick Warburton) and Fiona a Pandoran con artist

Taken from Borderlands 1, 2, and Borderlands: The Pre-Sequel, Tales from the Borderlands features Rhys, a Hyperion employee with a grudge against his boss Vasquez (voiced by a hysterical Patrick Warburton) and Fiona, a Pandoran con artist who uses her boyfriend August (an arms dealer) to negotiate a deal to sell a fake Vault Key to Vasquez.

Tales from the Borderlands is a Telltale Games, with assistance from Gearbox Software, release.
