I have been aching for a “good” or even “great” FPS lately. This past summer, I got Crysis and loved it, then got Crysis 2 and hated the console saving system. Hated. It.
I have seen a few more come out, recently.
What do you recommend? I yearn for the golden days of my youth with DOOM, Quake, Unreal.
If you can wait two weeks Battlefield 3 comes out. I don’t know if the beta is still open, I haven’t checked today, but from what I’ve played it’s friggin sweet.
You can play solo. They have a single player campaign, although the bulk is online. You can get into a squad while in the battle, but that just gives you someone to spawn on. You don’t actually need to communicate/work with the squad.
And it’s straight FPS. You’re one of four classes (assault/medic, engineer [they fix vehicles], support [they give ammo], or recon [snipers].) You can also drive/fly tanks, jets, jeeps, APCs, helicopters.
Yep. And this year is Modern Warfare 3. I tried the Battlefield 2 beta, and it’s super campy. It’s not even the full game, with all the other stuff, which I prefer to not have in the first place.
Call of Duty was the name of the very first game. Since then they’ve had several games under the COD name, they include 2, 3, World At War, and Modern Warfare, Modern Warfare 2, and Black Ops. There are some characters that carry over within the series, and the MW games are actual sequels, but you can play each game without knowing anything about the previous one and be just fine.
Black Ops will still be supported for a long time, and it has a pretty good campaign, albeit interrupted with long cutscenes that you wish you could skip if you replay any of it. Put it on the easiest setting and you can run and gun all you want through a bunch of different scenarios, or play it on the harder levels if you want a hell of a challenge.
Still, the trend with FPS games has been to put in a token campaign and optimize it for multiplayer. If you’re not already pretty good at FPS multiplayer those kids will take your heart right out of it. Getting demolished endlessly and repeatedly by “elite” gamers takes a while to get over, at least as long as it takes for you to get better. So if that’s not your thing you might want to stick to the older games.
That’s sad. FPS used to be fun, even if you were getting spanked.
Anyway, thanks for the tips.
As an adult with a real life to attend to rather than 20-30 hrs per week gaming, I am quite used to being “pwned” by the elite gamers who do have this time.
I take no shame in it, but it does get boring. At least in a FPS, it’s based somewhat on skill and not on how many hours you can grind for gear, as in an MMO.
I’ll have to see about grabbing a copy when it comes out.
Can i recommend Space Marine. Run around in the Warhammer 40K universe as a 8’ tall power armoured wrecking machine. Take on Orks mobs 50 strong at once with a variety of entertaining weapons.
Campaign runs about 9-10 hours and i enjoyed every minute of it.
You’re pretty much screwed. Those sorts of games don’t go over well with the console crowd, so they’ve dried up. Everything now is an on-rails, lead you by the nose, automatically regenerating health, corridor based copy of call of duty.
You may like the serious sam games (the linked was just the latest and most expensive one - there are older, cheaper ones) which are basically doom-like in their game play but more farcical. I can’t recommend them because I haven’t played them, but I know they’re of the same sort of doom style.
UT3 was the last of the q3/UT type games and barely anyone plays it. There’s quake live - basically a web browser free version of Q3 - but I don’t know how it turned out.
Metro 2033 is on sale on Steam for $5 today. It’s a very atmospheric, story-based FPS game (no multiplayer, I believe). Definitely worth a shot at that price.
Metro 2033 is definitely a good game and worth the $5, but it’s not at all the sort of thing he’s looking for. It’s a corridor based (at least it has good reason, in this case), slow paced, resource-strapped atmospheric sort of game with a horror element - which is pretty much the opposite of an old school run around shoot em up. It is one of the few games that fit that style though that actually manages to be good. I recommend it generally to anyone if you have a decent computer.
Seconding Serious Sam, though I haven’t played it. Everything I’ve heard about it suggests it’s what you’re looking for in the Doom/Quake variety.
Borderlands is good, solid old-fashioned FPSing, though the story is weak and there are RPG elements tacked on (leveling, skill trees, gear), but if you’re willing to deal with those it can be enjoyable.