
Bully: Scholarship Edition
Rockstar's sharp-tongued school sandbox remains genuinely charming nearly two decades on, but the PC port will test your patience before it wins your heart.
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My honest advice before you load this up: grab a controller and install SilentPatch from GitHub before you even launch the game. With those two things done, Bully: Scholarship Edition transforms from a frustrating relic into one of the more inventive open-world games Rockstar has ever made. Without them, you are staring down erratic framerates, crashes that strike mid-mission, and keyboard controls so awkward the game literally instructs you to scroll your mouse wheel up and down simultaneously. The core game beneath that crusty port is worth digging for. You play as Jimmy Hopkins, a wisecracking fifteen-year-old dumped at Bullworth Academy, a fictional boarding school populated by warring cliques: jocks, preppies, nerds, greasers, and bullies. The structure is essentially a compact open-world sandbox, closer in spirit to a focused Rockstar action game than the sprawling GTA series. Progress means earning or losing favor with each faction as you complete chapter missions, and the variety in those missions holds up well. One moment you are manning a potato-cannon turret to protect nerds from a jock raid, the next you are sneaking through a dormitory to sabotage a rival's prized Venus flytrap. The Scholarship Edition adds extra missions and classes on top of the original PS2 release, giving it more content than most players remember. The class system deserves a mention because it is doing something genuinely clever. Attending lessons unlocks perks and items: passing chemistry gives you better stink bombs, acing English improves your ability to talk your way out of confrontations. Each subject runs as a mini-game, ranging from dissection puzzles to lockpicking that requires drawing careful mouse circles, to auto-shop sequences where timing the input correctly before and after the on-screen prompt is the entire trick. A few of these wear thin on replay but they break up the mission flow well enough that Bullworth never feels like a single-loop grind. The world itself is the game's quiet achievement. Around 60 named NPC students roam the campus and surrounding town of Bullworth, each carrying a distinct personality and dialogue set. Overhearing conversations as you sprint between objectives adds texture that a lot of bigger open worlds still fail to match. The map is small by modern standards, but that density works in its favor: nothing feels like filler geography. Where things fall apart, beyond the port woes, is in the navigation. There are no waypoints on the minimap, which means you will get lost more than feels reasonable, especially early on. The story pacing sags in the back half and the camera, particularly in tight spaces, fights you. Keyboard-and-mouse players who cannot or will not switch to a gamepad will have a genuinely rough time even after patching, because some mini-games translate poorly to any input scheme other than an analog stick. The PC version is also capped at 30fps by default, and while community tools fix that, it is a setup tax that should not exist in 2026. The honest verdict is this: Bully is a game worth playing, offered in a PC version that makes you work for it. Patch it, plug in a controller, and you will find one of the more distinct action-adventure games of its era, one that still has no real successor despite Rockstar fans asking for a sequel for nearly twenty years.

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Información del juego
- Desarrolladora
- Rockstar New England
- Distribuidora
- Rockstar Games
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- 23 dic 2010


