"Neofeud: A Diamond Of Storytelling In The Scrap Pile" + Soundtrack Released!

First up, the Neofeud Soundtrack is now available, with 46 tracks and 2 1/2 hours of music, for just $4.99!
Here's a snippet from a recent review on the soundtrack itself: "Behind the quips and one-liners you’ll hear during the game is one of the best soundtracks you can find in a game. Pounding electronic synth reminiscent of the 80’s and some of the most kick-ass rock n’ roll that has blasted my eardrums had me sitting back at times with the game paused just to savor the listening experience." Sprites and Dice
You can also find the Neofeud soundtrack on Bandcamp.
And here are some excerpts from the rest of the Neofeud review:
A Diamond Of Storytelling In The Scrap Pile
"When I play a game, I play to be compelled or immersed in some way. The game has to dig its claws in and drag me in. Walking away has to be difficult or that’s exactly what I’ll do. Neofeud grabbed me in just that way through its gripping mastery of storytelling, akin to how last I binged on episodes of Game of Thrones.
Neofeud is a point-and-click game set in a sci-fi dystopia borne of the minds of every prominent science fiction writer from the past century, from H.R. Giger to Ridley Scott. The result is a disturbing yet strangly familiar dystopian society in which social inequality is systemic, the top one percent have their own one percent, and the birth of A.I has resulted in a massive population of unemployed sentient robots. Sound interesting? We're only just dipping our toes.
Beginning by introducing the main character of the story, an ex-cop and currently social worker named Karl Carbon, the story of Neofeud quickly explodes into a story rife with psuedoscience and more twists than an M. Night Shamlyan movie. As a single conspiracy unfolds, others follow, creating a story layered so deep that by the halfway mark of Neofeud’s potential 15-hour game time I found myself questioning characters motives even more than the main character of the game itself.
Past endless conspiracies and a spiraling story, the characters of Neofeud are developed so much more than characters in nearly any other game I’ve recently played. Karl and the cast that he interacts with are human to a tee. Interactions with them are immersive and real, a necessity when a majority of the game is dialogue."
Read the full review on Sprites And Dice.