Showing posts with label Xbox One. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Xbox One. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Mafia 3 Review: Come for the Story, Stay for the Platinum Trophy

There’s a point in just about every game nowadays where you realize exactly what said game is all about. It’s usually very early in the game, after you’ve completed a few story missions and a side mission or two and now you’re staring at a world map full of tiny icons and markers.

One of two things happens when this moment arises. You either get a tingly feeling of joy for having a new outlet of fun to look forward to after each soul crushing day at the office, or you feel emptiness. Emptiness because the plot is clichéd and the gameplay is duller than… A day at the office, and all you got for your sixty bucks is a bunch of samey “quests” and worthless collectibles that you’re going to gather up because there is a trophy or achievement attached to it.

It’s a bit of a miracle that I completed Mafia 3. By the time I reached that moment of realization maybe three or four hours in, Final Fantasy XV came out and Half Life friggin’ 3 wasn’t going to keep me away from the latest Final Fantasy. Mafia 3 went back into the box.

Lo and behold, FF XV let me down and I felt oddly compelled to go back to stealth-killing racists and gathering Playboy magazines in 1960s New Bordeaux.

Thursday, August 25, 2016

Player Choice, and How The Witcher 3 Absolutely Nails It

Publishers nowadays are in the habit of rereleasing their major games a year or so after launch, packaging them with all the DLC and add-ons and calling them “Game of the Year” Editions, so it’s no surprise that The Witcher 3 will be getting the same treatment at the end of this month. So what’s different? Nothing, really, except that CD Projekt Red’s 2015 masterpiece is one of those titles that can call their product the “Game of the Year” without anyone raising an eyebrow. It’s an unofficial title to bestow, but The Witcher 3: The Wild Hunt is a once-in-a-generation sort of game.

The conclusion of the Witcher trilogy does so many things well, and anyone who has yet to play it can fork over fifty dollars rest assured that it’s money well spent. Hell, if anyone is getting ripped off here, it’s the publisher. There’s enough content in this package, between the main story, the sixteen add-ons and two DLC episodes to last for months and the amazing thing is, it manages to stay fresh from start to finish.