Ready At Dawn Debunks Rumors Of Inferior Builds For The Order: 1886 Gameplay; Poor Quality Linked To Inferior Twitch Stream! Actual Screenshots Reveal Better Rendering, At 30FPS

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Leaks to The Order: 1886 gameplay are yet to be released, but initial screenshots reveal a promising title.

The game is in development for over a year, and this June's E3 should showcase it as one of this year's best next-gen releases.

Leaks and "insider-confirmed" rumors often mislead, although many are indeed credible and realized once the game comes out. Some leaks showcase early builds of games in development, though, and may not do justice to the final version.

Recent gameplay streams of The Order: 1886 have fans speculating of a downgraded, inferior build. Twitch streams involve tearing and skipped frames, but developer Ready at Dawn was quick to point out the fault is in the poor stream, not in the actual quality of The Order: 1886 gameplay.

Andrea Pessino, Ready at Dawn's founder was candid: "Thanks everyone! Oh, and the frame rate is actually VERY nice, do not blame us for streaming issues please... : ) there is no tearing when you play the game and if any ever shows up we will squash it. ; )"

Recent leaks actually reveal better builds of the game, especially in character rendering. Images are vastly improved, comparing June 2013 and May 2014 builds. The detail in character's rendering is evident up close. Ready at Dawn also aims for 30fps, the reliable standard.

Rants about the frame rate started when a stream for the The Order: 1886 gameplay came out on Twitch. Ready at Dawn also quenched any doubt about the game's playability (gearnuke.com).

"Don't worry about framerate, it was just a streaming issue, live it runs smoothly. As for the AI, in that scene where they are dragging the other guy, enemies are scripted to do just that in that very moment. One of the strongest points (alongside graphics) will be the plot so... on that regard you can relax."

The Order: 1886 gameplay is released in anticipation of its release date, scheduled this Fall.

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