Nainstalovat Steam
přihlásit se
|
jazyk
简体中文 (Zjednodušená čínština)
繁體中文 (Tradiční čínština)
日本語 (Japonština)
한국어 (Korejština)
ไทย (Thajština)
български (Bulharština)
Dansk (Dánština)
Deutsch (Němčina)
English (Angličtina)
Español-España (Evropská španělština)
Español-Latinoamérica (Latin. španělština)
Ελληνικά (Řečtina)
Français (Francouzština)
Italiano (Italština)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonéština)
Magyar (Maďarština)
Nederlands (Nizozemština)
Norsk (Norština)
Polski (Polština)
Português (Evropská portugalština)
Português-Brasil (Brazilská portugalština)
Română (Rumunština)
Русский (Ruština)
Suomi (Finština)
Svenska (Švédština)
Türkçe (Turečtina)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamština)
Українська (Ukrajinština)
Nahlásit problém s překladem
I am the father of my 30 years old son named Billy. He has always loved games because they provide him with an outlet for entertainment that he cannot find in real life. Billy recently downloaded "Sex with Hitler: World War II" and played it for over 35 hours in less than a week.
To connect with my son, I decided to sign up for a Steam account and purchase the game to see if I could play with him. I downloaded the game, looked through the tutorial, but unlike the Wii games, I couldn't find a co-op option to play with him through. I asked my son for help and he prepared a challenge for me. I love it because it's the only real bond between me and my son since we went for a walk and played on the Wii a few years ago. I’ve gotten older since I last went hiking, and don’t have the energy I used to, so to sit down and play with him, in a way he knew how, was like a dream come true.
░░░░░░░░░░████████░░░░▄▄░
░░░░░░░░░░███▀██▀█░░▄███░
░░░░░░░░░░▐████▀██▄███▀░░
░░░░░░░░░░░▀████████▀░░▄▄
░░░░░░░░░░▄███████▀░░▄███
░░░░░░░░░▄█████████▄███▀░
░░░░░░▄██████████████▀░░░
░░░░▄██████████████▀░░░░░
░░░▐████████████▀░░░░░░░░
░░░█████████████░░░░░░░░░