![]() ![]() Here's more official talk on everything above: The untamed wilds of Weird West have witnessed many changes since its release back in March. ![]() So if you haven't played Weird West, now is as good a time as any to invest on one of the year's best releases. In addition to the discount, WolfEye has made the entire first journey of the game - the Bounty Hunter Journey - *free on Steam right now. To celebrate the transformative nature of a game like Weird West - an immersive sim with many, many, many moving parts - the game's key stakeholders have put together something of a "how it's going" style trailer while also offering it up in respective PC marketplaces 50% off, starting later this week (1AM AEST this Friday). The end result, six months on, is a game in as good a shape as ever, which is saying a lot as its initial release was still pretty damn good. Heard a different tale about this topic or have other town names and cities to add? Send it our way - we'd love to hear all about it! Or if you're curious about one of our region's many oddities, submit your question via email to "Weird West Texas" in the subject line or via text at fact the dev team at WolfEye has been one of the most proactive I've seen to date where community feedback and engagement is concerned, with any and all discourse around the game going into the melting pot of updates, tweaks, balances and improvements. dropping a full 66 degrees within a span of seven hours.ĭon't like the weather? Just wait six months. Overall, the most extreme temperature range in the region occurred in 1919 when temperatures in Amarillo reached 67 degrees at noon, dropped to 23 degrees by 1 p.m. In San Angelo, the record for all-time highest monthly average temperature was set last July with a monthly average temperature of 89.7 degrees. While the average temperature this month is 80.2 degrees for both Lubbock and Amarillo, July 2011 saw an even higher monthly average of 86.0 degrees in Lubbock and 85.2 degrees in Amarillo. The most consecutive days of triple-digit temperatures in Lubbock and San Angelo was, respectively, 34 and 37. This year, 105 degrees is the highest temperature Amarillo recorded, on July 18, and in Lubbock, this year's high was 110 degrees on July 12. In 1936, the Panhandle recorded its record-high of 117 degrees in Clarendon, while Lubbock recorded its high of 114 degrees in 1994. In fact, San Angelo set its all-time high temperature just last month at 114 degrees and was the hottest place in the country at point. On the opposite end, we're not too distant from our all-time record highs. The most consecutive days of below-freezing temperatures was 12, nine and six in Amarillo, Lubbock and San Angelo, respectively, in 1978, 19. In San Angelo, that record is minus 4 degrees, set in 1989. The coldest-ever temperature in the Panhandle took place years earlier in 1959, when Spearman recorded a temperature of minus 22 degrees. ![]() That same day, Lubbock hit its all-time low of minus 17 degrees. It may feel like months since we've experienced weather even remotely close, but on July 1, Amarillo recorded a minimum temperature of 59 degrees, while Lubbock was just a bit warmer at 64 degrees on July 3.Īnd while we're on the topic of cold weather, did you know the state's all-time low temperature was recorded in West Texas? The temperature dropped to minus 23 degrees in Seminole on Feb. ![]()
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