Unfortunately, that won't work.
First, what you're uploading to PS Plus or a USB stick is not the game itself, but your game progress (aka. savegame). Savegames are useless without the game itself.
Second, even if you could upload the entire game to PS Plus or a USB stick, you'd still be uploading the corrupted game. Which means you'd be downloading the same corrupted game back onto your PS4. This won't achieve anything apart from wasting your time.
Your only option is to either have the game owner download the game on your PS4 again, or buy the game on your own account.
However, it appears you don't quite understand the difference between a game and a savegame, so it's unclear whether the game itself is corrupted, or whether your savegame is.
If your savegame is corrupted, you'll have to try loading your earlier savegames until you find one that isn't corrupted. You won't need to gain access to the owner's account or buy the game for yourself. In the worst case (if none of your savegames are uncorrupted), you'll have to start a new game.
Your PS4 might have automatically deleted older savegames to make space for newer ones. If you're lucky, you can fetch older savegames from PS Plus, if they haven't been deleted from there yet. Fetching savegames from PS Plus may delete the savegames on your PS4, so I'd recommend making a backup of your current savegames to a USB stick before messing with PS Plus, just in case.
This is from https://thesilentsea.net/index_en.html
It's a puzzle game that is a promo tie in for the Korean Netflix series https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Silent_Sea_(TV_series)
I found it by doing reverse image search on all of the "inventory" assets and found it with https://www.google.com/search?tbs=sbi:AMhZZitKUjSp3scZoVTSljhoauwYLkxlUvTnSf-e-_1u-tkn73WjmtU2iWvr2SMQsTsknR6FLOsCqTwVoMciK1OuSUYlA2GHRORVdt1RvtVOIYTmfdrZ8jp3zQfIIStCbo84d7OArbxKP21lVm3IA-mpQQ2p_1fdENQx3yE875j4o8J81NnStEBcPZPbgHk0Ph53IpnuVk1HxIjAWBhKud0iEDHx4oo6OS40zIOOxRAdbFaekvGv2iwL2kQfXhXdqVgx83O5Y_1d7n-RSIv1p2F4mMP2ea_1XeKBJDuQ0GNKNi-JEuB0GsRIKGn2aZpF02B4KZSdyyPAEKcZJN8MEd8nA62bw0TOXju5yQ :
Without giving any spoilers to solving the puzzle, the sos room is the 2nd room of Storage 5.
The game lets you pick b/t Korean and English.
A reverse image search identified this game as https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amazing_Alex by Rovio Entertainment. I’ve found similar screenshots of this game so I think it’s correct.
https://www.imore.com/amazing-alex-iphone-and-ipad-review
What Shadur left in comments is correct. If you are expecting high results on your reviews after development, especially if the game has the chance to be a hit, you want to hype it. It will result in increased marketing and sales/units sold. If your end product gets bad reviews and overall isn't that good you will take a large decrease in sales and your fan-base could decrease by more than average.
I highly recommend goolging the wiki for (can't on this pc [work filters]) and looking into what makes a great game or what causes x and y... ETC.
The best thing to think of when you encounter this is it is a risk/return multiplier. Good turns really good and bad turns really bad.
Also, when you "be modest" and in turn develop a hit game it will not hurt you. You will get a message about it, but no negative impacts occur.
This is from a Flash animation, not a Flash game. Specifically, it's from https://www.newgrounds.com/portal/view/707265 , an instalment in the Madness Combat series. The screenshot is cropped from the opening scene, in which the protagonist Deimos is freefalling through
the afterlife, following his death in an earlier instalment.
Madness Interactive is also part of the Madness Combat series, so I can understand why Bassie thought that was the answer, but Madness Interactive came out in 2003 and predates Deimos' debut by several years.
(Content warning: SACRIFICE.fla contains extreme graphic violence and disturbing imagery.)
Your screenshot also looks like https://store.steampowered.com/app/251060/Wargame_Red_Dragon/ .
A similar video is seen here, with a visually identical map overview seen at the 2:15 mark.
Early on, the Catnip Enrichment workshop upgrade helps with refining into wood, but I'm guessing that isn't it. Late game, the only thing I can think of is that Bio Labs give Refine Ratio, did you build several of those recently?
The 3DS version is the original GameBoy Color version (so it's missing the Advanced Shop, but you can edit your saves to add in the exclusive rings).
All of the colouring tweaks found in the Advance version are also missing.
GBA with the Advance shop open on the left. 3DS Virtual Console version on the right.
It's level 1 of https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apocalypse_(video_game) , a PS1 game starring Bruce Willis (!?!)
Here is a clip of someone playing through that same scene:
[Edit] This is the game shown from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y7SUNPGggdo&t=33s . But it looks like there's a second game shown, starting at https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=74&v=y7SUNPGggdo - see the other answer for that one.
Hands down the easiest way that I have found is to get a Nintendo DS that has the Game Boy Advance slot (original and DS Lite), and a slot-1 flash cart.
After that it's just a matter of downloading some software. Linfox is great for that.
NOTE: I would stay away from the M3 solutions for this task because one of the better backup programs, written by Rudolph, was updated to single out the M3 and refuse to backup the saved game.
Alternatively, there are (or at least were) solutions –
– that will plug right into a computer. However, this is a much more technical, difficult process.
Theoretically, a gaming PC is just a moniker. It has no established description. Also, you don't necessarily need a "gaming PC" to play video games. Depending on multiple factors, your PC might or might not be a good system.
For online competitive games, you need a fast internet. If you don't have one, the most expensive of gaming computers won't be able to give you a good experience.
A lot of AAA titles include a high level of lifelike effects and are built to mirror realism. These effects need a lot of GPU power. As a result, any PC with an older GPU cannot run newer AAA titles smoothly.
A minimum amount of RAM is required for a game to function well. The RAM size dictates how much volatile information can be stored to be passed to the GPU's VRAM while a game is running. Even if your PC has the best GPU and CPU but a low RAM size that is less than what a game requires (or the combination of all apps require including system functions and any streaming or typical apps that are also running), then the game will be exceptionally slow.
In fact, a lot of components are specific to a type of game or genre of game. For some games, the CPU is a better priority while for others, it can be the GPU, and for most recent AAA titles, it's both. Read more about CPU vs. GPU vs. RAM here.