You play stiff-necked military man Caydan Phoenix, who stumbles from gun fight to gun fight barking about private military concerns, drones, and how he's been set up. ![]() But Modern Combat 5 isn't the evolution in touchscreen FPS gaming that the genre sorely needs. The touchscreen controls are slippy and convoluted, the AI often leaves a lot to be desired, and the rhythm of slaughter rarely adds any new beats into play.ĭon't get me wrong, there's still a huge amount of fun to be had here, and the multiplayer and loadout-tweaking are as addictive as you'd expect. This is a concrete slab of a game, still beset by a lot of the clunkiness that hampered its predecessors. The levels are sliced a little thinner, there's a few new modes dropped in, and there's a focus on character progression across the board.īut if you're looking for something fresh, something that innovates and plays around with the FPS template, you're going to find MC5 lacking. ![]() Blackout bubbles over with action set-pieces, gruff military jargon, and more identikit goons to riddle with bullets. There's no real deviation from the template here. What do you want from a Modern Combat sequel? If it's more of the same, albeit shinier, gorier, and a little less coherent, then Modern Combat 5: Blackout won't disappoint.
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