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Metro exodus review
Metro exodus review







metro exodus review

There’s no doubt that these people were unpleasant. What I didn’t expect is the call to put down their weapons, the panic stricken voice urging your assailants to surrender in the hope that I would spare their women and children from the same fate that had already become most of the combatants. Still, break cover and get to killing, and your enemies react in a couple of ways: first they track you down and start firing at you, intelligently using cover to try and smoke you out of cover and bring you down.

metro exodus review

I chose the latter, and figured Artyom would too: life in the sludgy darkness of the Metro tunnels can toughen a person up, and life is cheap here, with just a couple of bullets enough to kill any human. You can try to sneak through the area without injuring any of the religious fanatics closing on your position, or you can shoot, stab and carve your way through the church like Batman with a grump on, brawling your way to the escape boat. The church is floating in radioactive waters, Artyom, who has spent most of his life underground, hasn’t learnt to swim. Step into the light – Exodus changes up the established order of things by giving you a big open world to explore and get killed in. Related: Metro Exodus System Requirements

METRO EXODUS REVIEW FULL

Soon after you emerge, blinking and confused into a world full of life, Artyom comes upon a church of fervent believers, who pretend to be friendly but quickly turn on Artyom, trapping him in part of the building and moving rapidly to apprehend him. This continues that narrative, but don’t worry if you haven’t played those games, I could barely remember the story and the game quickly cuts you away from that and puts you above ground. In Metro Exodus, the latest FPS game to be based on Dmitry Glukhovsky’s post apocalyptic Metro novels, player character Artyom can, depending on your playstyle, come to embody the whirlwind, an engine of vengeance that brings some sort of consequence to those above the surface.Īrtyom has been hiding along with what he believed were all the survivors globally of the war in Moscow’s Metro tunnels for the two previous iterations in the series. “They that sow the wind, shall reap the whirlwind” is the – admittedly pretentious – proverb, an idiom that explains that people will come to suffer the consequences of their actions.









Metro exodus review