![]() Rather than being a simple parallel to Lyft to your Uber, though, there are special missions where Hosr essentially kidnaps you (with a fake job request) and forces you to escape from a burning building or die. The overarching plot of the game, at least in the portion offered at this point, is that you’re competing with another firefighting app, Hosr. Where rescue missions act as the central gameplay, there are also escape missions that drive Embr’s storyline. To help in your rescue missions, you bring a loadout with your trusty water hose and a veritable Batman utility belt worth of tools and upgrades, such as a client finder which reveals the location of people to rescue or more…situational ones like a hairdryer or a Corsair-branded axe complete with RGB. Through the course of the game, you’ll run headlong into burning buildings to rescue helpless(ly preoccupied) civilians. ![]() The core concept of Embr is pretty well explained by the game’s tagline - “Über firefighters.” After a fun little career fair to act as a tutorial for the Embr’s concepts and controls, you take on the role of a “Respondr,” an on-demand firefighter who works for tips and strives to get a good review. I got a chance to play and review Embr over the weekend, and it’s genuinely a fun game with a few caveats from being an “Early Access” release. During the most recent Stadia Connect, Google showed off three new First on Stadia titles, including Embr, a game about firefighters being an app-based service instead of a public offering.
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