

Two new maps, Tora Bora and Underhub, have also been included and provide nice, big areas to explore. In addition to faster load times, players will also have a chance to wield the WMD, a rocket launcher which releases clouds of gas upon impact.
#Postal 2 share the pain multiplayer Patch
Share the Pain expands on the game by including elements from the patch that was released a few months ago. Once again, Postal 2: Share the Pain puts you in the role of Postal Guy, a recently fired computer programmer who decides to implement his own form of therapy.

These complaints aside, what sound you are given is pretty good.

The voice of Postal Guy doesn't really fit his character. There's really no music to be found, so expect to run around in complete silence. Sound is rather disappointing throughout. Long load times, which plagued the original release, have been fixed.
#Postal 2 share the pain multiplayer Pc
Even with a PC that is beyond the game's recommended specs (something I was missing the last time I encountered Postal 2), the game still looks subpar. To the game's credit, the environments are nice and big, but there's really not much to see. Character models still move with the stiff grace of a wooden Indian only to become rag dolls on death. Players are still subjected to the drab, dirty rathole named, fittingly enough, Paradise. The scenery and sounds of Postal 2 are largely unchanged, so check my previous review of the game for a quick rundown of what you may have missed. However, even a more 'complete' game doesn't mean it is a good one. Case in point, Postal 2: Share the Pain, which is the game that should have released last year but wasn't. I don't mind a patch here or there to optimize a few things, but when you're adding things to the game and basically making the game what it should have been at launch, I have a problem. This is one of the reasons I have, for years, been turned off of PC games. Unlike console titles, which pretty much need to be completed before shipping (although a few titles will certainly make you wonder), PC titles seem to ship whenever the publisher decides to ship it.
