>>125507 Yes, it's terrible. But it can be worse: when you walk into the workshop of a Japanese game that hasn't even been translated into English, let alone its mods.
In short, just get over it. If there are no mods in English, then the game isn't that popular in the English-speaking community. Although I could open up boosty or pateron for mod translations.... But I already have plenty of projects of my own.
>>126336 It's just a parody of modern Russian life wrapped in a sci-fi setting. You need to learn to define the difference between parody and Russophobia, otherwise you will resemble a hohol without self-reflection. Without self-reflection there is no progress in the development of society. Also Russian society is not perfect, unfortunately, and some entrepreneurs really put their own interests above public interests. But unlike in the TV series, in real Russia there is a system of anti-monopoly penalties and fines for them.
Moreover, birchpunk (a Russian comedy art direction) emerged as a result of a strong contrast between the saturated Soviet mass visuals reflecting the rich and turbulent past of industrial development (followed by the apocalypse of the 90s, the impoverishment of the population, the pause in development that caused the start of the technological singularity to be missed), and today's sudden and powerful development with the introduction of competitive technologies that even Japan envies (e.g. Gosuslugi, any Japanese would suck on that convenience). An old grandmother scanning QR through her smartphone at a Russian Post terminal to track a parcel in real time across Russia, against the background of a rustic wooden house with peeling paint - typical birchpunk. (And real life.)