Posted May 30, 2010
(PS3 version)
I've completed one playthrough of the game here and I must have played a different game from some of the reviewers. Sure, the technical aspects aren't great and the gameplay isn't as good as what you'd find in proper shooters (go figure, because it's not strictly a shooter game etc.). And yeah, the AI isn't that great. However, I honestly haven't ran into many bugs apart from one or two graphical glitches during the talks with Leland. The only other glitch I encountered was during a mansion level in Rome (I won't mention more). When I backtracked through a door, the whole screen goes black and such.
Anyways, as long as you're willing to look past what was mentioned and buy it for the rpg elements (i.e. the choices and how you can influence the story and such), you really should enjoy it. That's where the replayability comes into it like Michaellung said. Like, if you choose to help a faction out or gain their trust, they may help you out on missions and scenes may not be seen depending on what you do. Also, the order in which you play the different hubs/missions has a hand in determining how the story pans out. (Note: Not the overall story arc, but the little things and allegiances etc.)
Edit: By the way, I'd recommend playing on normal first time out and probably not as a recruit so that the game's not difficult. I've not tried it on hard yet so I can't vouch for how difficult it is, but I imagine people in the streams had problems because they went on the hard difficulty and chose the recruit option. Either that or they just weren't very good players and didn't play how they were meant to (i.e. avoid setting off alarms and take enemies out quietly when they can).
By the way Flintlock, the review scores basically just shattered the small amount of trust I have in reviews. Thankfully, I always read about games before buying them, so I rarely end up making a mistake. Sadly enough, based on the live feeds and all of the complaining, I did nearly cancel my pre-order of the game. Thankfully I didn't.
I feel bad for Obsidian mainly due to the bad press because it's not as bad as what people make out.
I've completed one playthrough of the game here and I must have played a different game from some of the reviewers. Sure, the technical aspects aren't great and the gameplay isn't as good as what you'd find in proper shooters (go figure, because it's not strictly a shooter game etc.). And yeah, the AI isn't that great. However, I honestly haven't ran into many bugs apart from one or two graphical glitches during the talks with Leland. The only other glitch I encountered was during a mansion level in Rome (I won't mention more). When I backtracked through a door, the whole screen goes black and such.
Anyways, as long as you're willing to look past what was mentioned and buy it for the rpg elements (i.e. the choices and how you can influence the story and such), you really should enjoy it. That's where the replayability comes into it like Michaellung said. Like, if you choose to help a faction out or gain their trust, they may help you out on missions and scenes may not be seen depending on what you do. Also, the order in which you play the different hubs/missions has a hand in determining how the story pans out. (Note: Not the overall story arc, but the little things and allegiances etc.)
Edit: By the way, I'd recommend playing on normal first time out and probably not as a recruit so that the game's not difficult. I've not tried it on hard yet so I can't vouch for how difficult it is, but I imagine people in the streams had problems because they went on the hard difficulty and chose the recruit option. Either that or they just weren't very good players and didn't play how they were meant to (i.e. avoid setting off alarms and take enemies out quietly when they can).
By the way Flintlock, the review scores basically just shattered the small amount of trust I have in reviews. Thankfully, I always read about games before buying them, so I rarely end up making a mistake. Sadly enough, based on the live feeds and all of the complaining, I did nearly cancel my pre-order of the game. Thankfully I didn't.
I feel bad for Obsidian mainly due to the bad press because it's not as bad as what people make out.
Post edited May 30, 2010 by DavidGil