A few hours ago, publisher THQ Nordic shared a new gameplay trailer for South Park: Snow Day. A cooperative action game in development at Question (the California-based studio behind the Stranger Things-like game The Blackout Club), South Park: Snow Day will launch next year on PC (Steam), Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 5, and Xbox Series S|X for a price of €29.99 / $29.99 / £24.99. The premise is very simple: a blizzard has landed in town, and school is canceled for the day, allowing for all sorts of mayhem to happen.
- It’s an all-new 3D co-op game.
- A blizzard of epic proportions has blanketed the town of South Park, and it’s up to Cartman, Stan, Kenny, Kyle, and you, as the New Kid, to save the town.
- Experience cooperative gameplay for the first time ever in a South Park game with up to three friends or ally bots – unleashing powerful, coordinated attacks on your foes.
- Equip and upgrade devastating melee and ranged weapons. Deploy special abilities and powers that will bring hordes of enemies and epic bosses to their knees.
- Use a wide range of iconic cosmetics and customize your New Kid with endless possible combinations, from beanies to Cheesy Poof T-shirts to chin balls.
The Steam page also includes the full system requirements, which should be easily handled by any PC built in the last eight years or so.
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- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS: Windows 10 64 bit
- Processor: AMD FX-6300 / Intel Core i3-4130
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- Graphics: Nvidia GeForce GTX 960 / AMD Radeon HD 7870
- DirectX: Version 11
- Storage: 35 GB available space
- Additional Notes: preliminary requirements, up to change until release
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- Requires a 64-bit processor and operating system
- OS: Windows 10 64 bit
- Processor: AMD FX-6300 / Intel Core i3-4130
- Memory: 8 GB RAM
- Graphics: Nvidia GeForce GTX 960 / AMD Radeon HD 7870
- DirectX: Version 11
- Storage: 35 GB available space
- Additional Notes: preliminary requirements, up to change until release
South Park: Snow Day may not be a roleplaying masterpiece like Obsidian’s Stick of Truth or Ubisoft San Francisco’s The Fractured But Whole, but it could still provide a lot of fun to fans of the animated sitcom.