Thursday, February 19, 2009

Xbox 360 - F.E.A.R 2: Project Origin

F.E.A.R. 2: Project Origin by Warner Games

F.E.A.R. 2 is the sequel to F.E.A.R. The campaign mode is a straightforward first person shooter with some niceties. There is no way to change to third person mode. So, you never get to see your character. Note that there are no mirrors in this game (they're all broken), so you can't even see a reflection.

Story

This story appears to be a prequel type of sequel to F.E.A.R. This game, Project Origin, attempts to explain how F.E.A.R. all started. This wasn't done in the first game. The story to this game is reasonably long for a campaign based game (took me the better part of a week to get through it).  So, the length was about the same as Gears of War 2.  For a lot of reasons, it has similarities to The Darkness in the way the story unfolds... not so much the main character's abilities.

Game Play

This is a straight first person shooter. It doesn't do anything special when compared to most other shooters like Halo 3, The Darkness and BioShock. The niceties I mention earlier are primarily the weapons and mech vehicle you get to use in parts of the game. What's compelling about this game, though, is not the gameplay. It's the story.

Story

This game appears to be a prequel to the original F.E.A.R. The game appears to explain where Alma (the girl) game from and how she got to be where she is. While I generally like how the story unfolds, the ending is not satisfying as neither was F.E.A.R. If Warner Games decides to back another one of these titles, I hope that it's an actual sequel. One that finally ends the story of Alma.

The one thing I will say about F.E.A.R. is that even though the title implies something about fear, it is not terrifying or scary. Both games were suspenseful, yes, but not scary. So, don't go into this game expecting something to scare the pants off you. Gore, yes. Violence, yes. Suspense, Yes. Terror, no.

As you progress, you will find out that your character has a connection to Alma and also has some Telesthetic (whatever that is) abilities. But, the game never exploits this. You're stuck with standard projectile or technological weapons throughout the game. Instead, it seems that since you have this ability, you should be able to harness it for use towards the end of the game. Perhaps that the ability might be used to confuse the enemy or similar. Whatever the end result, it makes sense that they should let you use it on your enemies as you learn how to harness the power.

Controls

When you first begin playing this game, a warning screen pops up claiming that depending on the screen, the controls may not be able to keep up with the graphics on the screen. So, things may get out of sync.

In the 30 years I've been gaming, I've never seen a warning such as this. So, what was the point in it? That said, I will say that this game does appear to have some controller issues. But, it appears to be a programming issue and not a lag issue. By that I mean that the controller is unresponsive in places. So, you aim, pull the trigger, but the lag between when you pull the trigger is enough for the enemy to shoot you. This is quite frustrating. It almost seems that the game reacts to the trigger pull and forces a robot character to kill you instead of you killing it.

Tutorials

Tutorials are provided in the beginning to help get you to use the features you have available. So, the early levels force you to learn how to play the game. I'm mixed when it comes to tutorials, though. I find that they are usually too restrictive to be helpful and don't really help you learn the features. Just give me the gun (or whatever) and and let's move on. I'll learn as I go.

Checkpoints

This game is the type that uses checkpoint saves. You cannot save your place wherever you want. Instead, you have to rely on getting to a checkpoint. So. if your character dies, it will start up there. In some games, I find this can be a problem as sometimes checkpoints are too far apart. In this game, the checkpoints are close enough together that it wasn't overly problematic. There were a few places where I would have preferred closer checkpoints, but that was perhaps one or two places in the hundreds of checkpoints throughout the game.

Yes, I prefer to be able to save anywhere.. and I prefer that the game save full state information for full recovery, but that can also be an issue. When you restart the game from a checkpoint, it fills your health bar fully so this is at least one benefit of this system.

Health Pickups

This game basically requires you to find and apply health manually yourself which I am not a big fan of. There are two types of health pickups in this game: Immediate health replenish and med packs you can use at any time.

As you progress with this game, you will find less and less health (of any kind) throughout the levels. You also find, at most, one med pack per level at the end levels. This makes the game frustrating to complete because you end up with so little health your character is forever dying and restarting. This style of gaming is not challenging, it's just stupid.

Note that even though you may be carrying the maximum of 3 med packs, you must remember to apply the med packs yourself. The game won't do this for you. So, if you run out of health, your character dies (even though you carry 3 med packs). I found this part of the game the most stupid part. Just give me a feature to auto-apply health if it's there.

Weapons

Weapons are found plentifully throughout most levels as you eliminate enemies. So, you'll have plenty of ammo throughout the game, with the exception of one level. There is one level about 2/3 through the game where you will end completely out of ammo (because the enemies drop nothing). Head shots are your friend on this level.

Graphics

The graphics are reasonably well done. The texture maps on the environments are excellent. So, the terrain makes this game quite believable. There wasn't too much in way of glitching or slowdowns. Many of the later levels require strategic thinking (to conserve health and ammo) and still get to the next checkpoint. So, you don't go running into the level on a rampage and expect to get through the level. In most cases, you need to locate the enemies and use an attack plan to get rid of them one at a time. The best gun for this is the sniper rifle.

Audio

The audio sets a suspenseful mood. The music swells when enemies are near, so you can tell. It also subsides when you've cleared the level.

Overall

I liked the game reasonably well. The story was compelling enough, but the gameplay was a bit too standard for my tastes. If they had explored the mental abilities of the character and let him harness these powers as a weapon, I would have felt the game was much more complete. But, it didn't happen.

I also felt that the first F.E.A.R. game was slightly better than this one. This one seemed not as well done, even though the graphics looked good. In some ways, I felt that this game was a bit too much like The Darkness (without the creature powers). In the same way as you switched back and forth between real life and a dream realm, so does F.E.A.R. 2 in places. Unfortunately, you didn't get to play much in that realm. There was, in fact, only one level that played out in the dream realm. The rest of the game was played out in the game's real-life.

While the story was the best part, it didn't congeal the game fully and it also didn't end in a satisfactory way.. it was quite predictable.

Score

  • Sound: 8/10
  • Graphics: 8/10
  • Bugginess: 10/10 (Amazingly, no bugs or crashes)
  • Controls: 7/10
  • Bang-To-Buck: 1/10
  • Play Value: $15
  • Overall: 8/10 (no special gameplay, story was best part)

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