Instal Steam
login
|
bahasa
简体中文 (Tionghoa Sederhana)
繁體中文 (Tionghoa Tradisional)
日本語 (Bahasa Jepang)
한국어 (Bahasa Korea)
ไทย (Bahasa Thai)
Български (Bahasa Bulgaria)
Čeština (Bahasa Ceko)
Dansk (Bahasa Denmark)
Deutsch (Bahasa Jerman)
English (Bahasa Inggris)
Español - España (Bahasa Spanyol - Spanyol)
Español - Latinoamérica (Bahasa Spanyol - Amerika Latin)
Ελληνικά (Bahasa Yunani)
Français (Bahasa Prancis)
Italiano (Bahasa Italia)
Magyar (Bahasa Hungaria)
Nederlands (Bahasa Belanda)
Norsk (Bahasa Norwegia)
Polski (Bahasa Polandia)
Português (Portugis - Portugal)
Português-Brasil (Bahasa Portugis-Brasil)
Română (Bahasa Rumania)
Русский (Bahasa Rusia)
Suomi (Bahasa Finlandia)
Svenska (Bahasa Swedia)
Türkçe (Bahasa Turki)
Tiếng Việt (Bahasa Vietnam)
Українська (Bahasa Ukraina)
Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
The PV-4 carries just enough cargo to be useful and the onboard ore detector can help you locate deposits in the early game. It's also quite handy for retrieving cargo drops. Later in the game, the PV-4 remains useful as a people-mover for situations when a flyer would be impractical.
It's very easily to flip the PV-4 by turning too hard at speed. The PV-4 also sags when loaded with cargo, and can bottom out easily. On gently rolling hills just keep your speed to around 40 m/s unloaded, and 30 m/s loaded and you should be fine.
The PV-4 has an onboard repair projector. You'll need it. I should also mention that due to its extremely light weight the PV-4 is not suitable for low-G environments , but it LOVES Mars.
Simple, practical, useful. 9/10 would Dukes of Hazzard again.