You can finally say it that The Call Of Duty comeback starts here. People might argue that the world's best FPS (First Person Shooter) never went away,but last year's Call Of Duty: Ghosts saw records go down and a lot of bad reviews on the internet. Where as the instalments before Ghosts was Modern Warfare 3 and Black Ops 2 saw a huge progress. Black Ops 2 was the best FPS series for the Esports Community.
Call Of Duty Advanced Warfare compared to Call Of Duty: Ghosts is very different. In terms of sales and gameplay. Advanced Warfare wont change that entirely. It is still Call Of Duty, and everything the Hipsters like to mock about the series- it's linearity, its migraine-including bombast, its woefully thin plot lines, its follow the objective marker approach- still has to be mocked. But if you liked Call Of Duty 2 and 3, and loved Modern Warfare and its first sequel and enjoyed being dragged along from one action sequence to the next, then Call Of Duty Advanced Warfare is your game.
Sledgehammer Games crafted an opening that does everything a great first chapter is meant to do: it welcomes you with big-budget bravado, offers control tips without excessive hand-holding, and establishes the tone of the campaign. “Welcome back to Call of Duty,” the first chapter seems to say. “Let's show the other games how to make a proper entrance. And while we're at it, let's test your subwoofer with the bass of an explosion and the vibrations of slow-motion melodrama.” This is an introduction that kicks off the wartime journey of protagonist Jack Mitchell, played by Troy Baker. He begins as a U.S. Marine, but after a catastrophic event during his first mission, he joins Atlas, a private military corporation run by the generically named Jonathan Irons, who is played by a realistically-rendered Kevin Spacey.It's never been easier for a Call of Duty campaign to justify the series' traditional chapter-by-chapter globetrotting. When the services of the Atlas Corporation are sold to the highest bidder, every country is fair game. That said, Mitchell's story isn't as clear-cut as it seems; he isn’t simply a Marine-turned-mercenary who travels where Irons tells him to. His tours offer a smattering of memorable missions, including a fast-paced intra-city manhunt through Santorini and several pulse-quickening escape sequences. Even Kevin Spacey’s boastful tour of an Atlas facility is a pleasurable golf-cart ride on rails that wouldn’t feel out of place as an EPCOT Center attraction, albeit one with a lot of killing machines in the background.
Call Of Duty Advanced Warfare compared to Call Of Duty: Ghosts is very different. In terms of sales and gameplay. Advanced Warfare wont change that entirely. It is still Call Of Duty, and everything the Hipsters like to mock about the series- it's linearity, its migraine-including bombast, its woefully thin plot lines, its follow the objective marker approach- still has to be mocked. But if you liked Call Of Duty 2 and 3, and loved Modern Warfare and its first sequel and enjoyed being dragged along from one action sequence to the next, then Call Of Duty Advanced Warfare is your game.
Sledgehammer Games crafted an opening that does everything a great first chapter is meant to do: it welcomes you with big-budget bravado, offers control tips without excessive hand-holding, and establishes the tone of the campaign. “Welcome back to Call of Duty,” the first chapter seems to say. “Let's show the other games how to make a proper entrance. And while we're at it, let's test your subwoofer with the bass of an explosion and the vibrations of slow-motion melodrama.” This is an introduction that kicks off the wartime journey of protagonist Jack Mitchell, played by Troy Baker. He begins as a U.S. Marine, but after a catastrophic event during his first mission, he joins Atlas, a private military corporation run by the generically named Jonathan Irons, who is played by a realistically-rendered Kevin Spacey.It's never been easier for a Call of Duty campaign to justify the series' traditional chapter-by-chapter globetrotting. When the services of the Atlas Corporation are sold to the highest bidder, every country is fair game. That said, Mitchell's story isn't as clear-cut as it seems; he isn’t simply a Marine-turned-mercenary who travels where Irons tells him to. His tours offer a smattering of memorable missions, including a fast-paced intra-city manhunt through Santorini and several pulse-quickening escape sequences. Even Kevin Spacey’s boastful tour of an Atlas facility is a pleasurable golf-cart ride on rails that wouldn’t feel out of place as an EPCOT Center attraction, albeit one with a lot of killing machines in the background.
u just made me fall in love with cod!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteI had no prior knowledge about this game. But after reading your post it intrigues me too. Your background is apt.
ReplyDeletewow! i am going to buy this game now mate
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ReplyDeleteThis blog introduced me to Call Of Duty and its very interesting
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