An ENTIRE match of The Culling summed up in 2 minutes
I decided to suffer so you didn't have to.
The Culling was once an amazing game. It had a atmosphere unlike any other battle royale game (besides Realm Royale). It was more or less a battle royale game show in which 16 contestants battle on a deadly remote island full with lots of weapons, wildlife, and supply drops. The game was ruined by bad updates and got shut down months after it came out of Steam early access. Then, they made The Culling II, which was basically dead on arrival. Then, they took the original game back to its day 1 version and made the game free to play. Then, it was shut down again in May of 2019, then resurrected a few days ago with a $6 price tag. Also, the game now has this horrible pay-to-play system, which will pronounce this resurrection dead on arrival, and might possibly die faster than The Culling II.
Basically, the pay-to-play system is like this: Every match you win earns you a token. Each token you earn earns you an extra online match. You get 25 free tokens per day. If you run out of tokens, you will have to pay extra to unlock another game just to have a chance to earn another token which earns you another online match in which in that match you could earn a token in. Also, a certain set of tokens can be purchased with in-game microtransactions, basically packs containing online matches. A 3 token pack will cost $1, a 10 token pack will cost $3, and a 20 token pack will cost $5. You can additionally purchase unlimited playing time which grants you unlimited matches for a set amount of days. A 1 week pack will cost $2 while a one month pack will cost $6. You can also earn tokens by winning offline matches.
Xaviant clearly doesn't know what they're doing.
So, with all of that out of the way, here is a full match I played, cut down into 2 minutes because I didn't want to have to make you guys suffer for almost 10 minutes of gameplay. I'm doing you a favor.
And to Xaviant: either listen to your fans, or just let the game die out. It's no use beating an already-dead horse.
Enjoy me suffering.