You might have spotted a new Atomic Heart update hitting your PC over the weekend, as the Mundfish-developed FPS game has seen patch notes, fixes, and more since its recent release. Unfortunately, there are no patch notes for Atomic Heart’s February 26 update 1.3.3.0, and some reports indicate that the current Atomic Heart neuromodule issue has yet to be resolved. not solved either.

If you saw the roughly 12GB update for Atomic Heart on PC over the weekend, it’s the February 26 Atomic Heart update. Interestingly, despite the size of the update, there are no official patch notes from Mundfish detailing what is actually fixed.

On top of that, many reports suggest that one of the biggest problems (the neuromodules of the atomic heart) hasn’t been solved either. Neuro Mods are used in Atomic Heart to craft and upgrade Atomic Heart’s best weapons, making them an essential resource in your game, but many are reporting that they cannot be picked up. Usually you’ll get NeuroMods by defeating bosses in Atomic Heart, but many say NeuroMods just float in place.

“It won’t go into my inventory. It just stays in the air and I can’t interact with it. I’ve tried reloading, shutting down and restarting, but nothing works,” a Reddit user says.

Another user describes how the February 26 Atomic Heart update didn’t fix the issue, saying, “What it did instead was fail my last saves because loading the game left me instantly drops on the map.”

You can report the Atomic Heart Neuro-Mod issue on the Steam forums, but as mentioned, it’s currently unclear if Mundfish is aware of the issue or if the recent 12GB patch even attempted to fix it.

That’s not all for the new shooter, as the Ukrainian government has called for Atomic Heart to be banned from Steam, citing “toxicity” and “potential collection of information about user data”, with a full English version from a statement obtained by – Game News.

Developer Mundfish has come under intense scrutiny in recent weeks after it was alleged that the Russian government would benefit financially from the release of Atomic Heart. This is because among the investors involved in funding Mundfish are GEM Capital, an investment fund whose founder has ties to Gazprom and VTB Bank, both majority-owned by the Russian state.

Mundfish is also partnering with VK (formerly Mail.RU) for the Russian release of Atomic Heart, avoiding sanctions on Steam: VK is also majority-owned by the Russian state through Gazprombank, and Mundfish’s CEO is a former director . .RU. .

With Russia’s continued invasion of Ukraine, many gamers are now choosing to boycott the game in protest and donate money to organizations such as the Ukraine Crisis Appeal, the International Rescue Committee and the British Red Cross.

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