I might pick this up later when I've built new PCs for my flatmates at the start of the uni year. Could be fun with a group.
If it is bad I will take it down there and give it back to them.
I don't know if RTW are going to be handling this game in the long term, they have another massive project in the works already. That is a good sign though because there are some good small dev teams based here that tend to pick up side projects handed out by larger devs and handle them well (porting big releases, making dlc for big titles).
Actually their new project has the potential to work amazingly well with APB, and I'm looking forward to see how they'll use them together. For anyone who hasn't seen the announcements, it's basically a social networking MMO set in the real world (well, maps of the real world). So you can alter or destroy real-world buildings, erect new ones, set up impromptu kart races around your city, and presumably other stuff.
Their pitch was "What if Nintendo had built Google Earth?" and superficially it bears about as much resemblance to APB as Farmville does to Gears of War, but imagine if they can bring their nifty little editable and interactable maps of the real world into APB, and let you play virtual cops and robbers in the streets around your house and stuff? And once they have maps of enough cities, what if the APB servers became location-specific, and you could hang around with and shoot at people from your rough area (or nearest city), smash a car into your bank's shop front and steal the virtual loot that scatters about, or hang around your favourite pub and mug the pedestrians passing by?
Then there's the marketplace benefits too, buying and selling clothes, graffiti, designs, music tracks, modded cars and whatever else they integrate into it would be way more interesting if you could get them from local folks. Imagine some dude who's in a cool unsigned band driving his car past you, you like the music that's playing out of his stereo and whisper him to ask what he's listening to, and he messages back with the date and place of their next gig?

Then local businesses could pay to have themselves put into the maps as a little bit of advertising.
I think in the long term APB is gonna become like Facebook, but with guns. And we've all occasionally wished that we could shoot someone in the face for posting annoying status updates or spamming you with Farmville invites, so I think it's a match made in heaven!
