![]() Getting caught isn’t the be-all and end-all as you’ll either have the option to repeat the same thing – preferably without being seen – or keep a low profile as so many alarms will increase the intensity of a search, meaning you’re more likely to be seen/caught. When the police turn up, they’ll patrol the areas you need access to, hit you with something blunt, and take you down the nick. Depending on the levels, you’ll have free roam, but once you start rolling your sleeves up, you’ll have some unwanted company, notably the old bill and their atrocious AI. ![]() Predominantly that means body disposal (or chopping them up and putting them into a woodchipper), retrieving evidence carelessly left behind, plus vacuuming – yes, vacuuming, a lot of blood. A deal has gone wrong or whatnot, and you, as the professional cleaner, must go in and eradicate any hint that your employers have been there. ![]() The 90s is appropriate as we have our bleached-hair thug who has a penchant for cutting things into pieces with a chainsaw, an agile character that would be best suited to feng shui vocational exercises, and, heaven-forbid: a hacker. “Do you remember that time where you…” comes to mind as we’ll join the gang, revisiting their introduction into the cleaning world and meeting their illustrious leader, Bob. Set in the 90s, their base is a funeral home that serves as a Family Guy-like hub for exposition. Emphasis on ‘crew’ as Bob is now joined by three other reprobates who assist him in bringing a scene of a crime to its former glory/sparkle. Said film plays a big part here, as well as other 90s flicks, plus there are plenty of nods to the era through the shenanigans of the clean-up crew. Think Mr Wolf of Pulp Fiction, and you’ll get the idea. Like its predecessor, your job here is to clean up after multiple… unconventional situations.
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