Deus Ex: Human Revolution Surprises
August 29th 2011 08:23
The first Deus Ex brought back memories of constant quick loads as I strive for that perfect stealth run, which I wouldn't have it any other way.
Deus Ex: Human Revolution is a return to form for one of the most pivotal game series in gaming history.
For me, it was a surprise the prequel to Deus Ex turned out to be highly rated by the top gaming websites in the internet spectrum. We are talking about prolific gaming reviewer Jim Sterling of Destructoid giving the game a 9.5 and Arthur Gies of IGN a 9.0.
Arthur Gies even told Rebel FM listeners his concern of not receiving review code 10 days before the game was set for release. Bad games are usually not sent by publishers to the games media ahead of time so to get unsuspecting buyers on Day One.
Luckily that isn't the case for this gem.
I've delved 3 hours of the game and completed the first mission. I've effortless moved through countless vents with my knees of steel, hopping between the sides of desks, engaged in a tense verbal stand off and hunted down all the secondary objectives without killing a single terrorist.
I'm playing exactly how I played the first Deus Ex, it was a great experience only hampered with technical issues found in the pc version: freezes while watching a tutorial, occasional frame skips and the odd crash. But at the end of the night, I look forward to doing more espionaging the next day. .
Deus Ex: Human Revolution is a return to form for one of the most pivotal game series in gaming history.
For me, it was a surprise the prequel to Deus Ex turned out to be highly rated by the top gaming websites in the internet spectrum. We are talking about prolific gaming reviewer Jim Sterling of Destructoid giving the game a 9.5 and Arthur Gies of IGN a 9.0.
Arthur Gies even told Rebel FM listeners his concern of not receiving review code 10 days before the game was set for release. Bad games are usually not sent by publishers to the games media ahead of time so to get unsuspecting buyers on Day One.
Luckily that isn't the case for this gem.
I've delved 3 hours of the game and completed the first mission. I've effortless moved through countless vents with my knees of steel, hopping between the sides of desks, engaged in a tense verbal stand off and hunted down all the secondary objectives without killing a single terrorist.
I'm playing exactly how I played the first Deus Ex, it was a great experience only hampered with technical issues found in the pc version: freezes while watching a tutorial, occasional frame skips and the odd crash. But at the end of the night, I look forward to doing more espionaging the next day. .
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