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Monday, November 14, 2016

Crysis Review

Crysis
Publisher: Electronic Arts Developer: Crytek Platform: PC Release: 2007 Players:Genre: First-Person Shooter / Sandbox Rating: 8.9 \ 10.0: Fantastic
Image result for crysis gameplay
Above is a military outpost being completely leveled.

In 2007, Crysis was released on PC and was received excellently. In addition to having solid gameplay that was unlike any FPS before it, the game wowed gamers and critics alike with its stunningly beautiful visuals. However, this meant that only the beefiest gaming rigs were able to run the game, and until it was ported to the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 in 2011, PC gamers obsessed over the question "Can it run Crysis?".

These days, more people remember the game more for its technical prowess than its gameplay, which begs the question: Is the game as fun as it is pretty?

Before I address this, let's discuss the plot; The game starts off onboard a plane from the perspective of the protagonist. While learning nothing but the code names of the soldiers surrounding him, Nomad (that's you) is told that the island they're about to infiltrate has been invaded by the North Korean military. Partway through their descent towards the island, Nomad is unexpectedly knocked off course and plummets into a river.

This is a decent setup, but I feel that the weak point of this game are its characters. I wanted badly to be able to care about these characters, and they were unable to prove that they were anything more than generic soldiers before (minor spoiler alert) two of them are killed off. Even Nomad himself is completely forgettable. You could argue that a character Halo's iconic Master Chief, another faceless marines in power armor was no less bland in his debut title, but he was shown to have an interesting backstory and actually displays emotion in more recent games. Nomad, however doesn't even appear in future Crysis games. However, there are likely few other people that feel this way, and the story's shortcomings do little to diminish the game's overall quality.

To answer the question from earlier, Crysis still plays as well as it looks. Progression is linear, but the island setting allows for stealth as well as as explosive battles. Helping to allow for variety is Nomad's nanosuit. This high-tech getup allows him to generate an extra layer of armor to absorb damage, make himself nearly invisible, sprint lightning-fast, jump incredibly high, and have superhuman strength. Using these abilities consume's energy, and managing it is crucial to surviving. While both your health and energy can regenerate, don't think that makes this an easy game. Even on normal difficulty, Nomad can be taken down with a realistically small number of bullets when unarmored, so don't try playing this game like you would Call of Duty. Adding further depth is the ability to customize weapons in real time. There are several sights and attachments that you can apply after collecting them, and you can also add a laser pointer or flashlight, change the firing pattern, or even sometimes swap the ammunition of most weapons. When I first got tired of going into each encounter guns blazing, I thought that I'd be unable to attack from long range. I then had a lightbulb moment and equipped an assault rifle, slapped on a sniper scope, set it to semi-automatic, loaded it with incendiary ammo, and added a tactical attachment that supplied me with an infinite amount of tranquilizer darts, then cloaked and picked off enemies from afar one by one without being detected. That's not to say that the more action-packed approach isn't just as entertaining -- charging towards a group of enemies and grabbing one of them with super strength with one hand and shooting the rest with the other is just as satisfying, and witnessing rubble fly as mounted gunners tore through small buildings was exhilarating. It is a bit disappointing, however, when you're forced to take the action-oriented route in certain setpiece moments. Additionally, the various vehicles you can operate, despite being equipped with powerful turrets, are often nearly destroyed in seconds, which is a real shame since shooters that allow you to use vehicles in unscripted sequences are scarce these days. The controls can also be a bit awkward on console -- I found my self accidentally switching to weapons unintentionally because the weapon wheel and "switch to previous weapon" are both mapped to the same button. This is just a nitpick, and due to the large amount of keys the game uses on PC, I was still very impressed that all of the vital commands were crammed onto a controller (leaning was sadly excluded).

I mentioned how amazing Crysis looked earlier, but the game looks so darn good that it's difficult to overstate. Everything from the water to the foilage to the trees left me in awe, and the mission in which you board an alien ship is just as stunning as the coasts and jungles. I am a firm believer in the idea that gameplay is far more important than graphics, but I have little doubt that you'll be impressed by this game. Crysis obviously has lower texture detail on the 360 and PS3 and the draw distance is a bit short, but it is still easily one of the best looking games on the seventh-generation consoles.

The first two thirds of Crysis are fantastic, but the missions that follow the defeat of the general you came to the island to take out are lackluster by comparison. All the aforementioned freedom is mostly gone, and the enemy soldiers are replaced by the flying tentacled Ceph aliens that are briefly seen effortlessly dispatching troops several times prior. While this isn't necessarily bad, it's a pretty dramatic change in gameplay. The final boss, however, isn't enjoyable at all and lasts for what seems like forever even once you figure out its attack pattern (and some PC player have even reported that the boss was unkillable in their copy).

Crysis may not be a perfect game, but the the majority of it was incredibly enjoyable. Regardless of its issues, I can't recommenced it enough to anyone itching to play a unique FPS.

Ups
Tons of freedom in combat (for the most part)
Nanosuit abilities add strategy
On the fly weapon customization I've rarely seen in other games
Amazing visuals

Downs
Complete lack of character development
Lackluster final few missions
Occasional performance issues
Vehicles are near-useless

The System Difference: Graphics fanatics will obviously want to pick up the PC version of Crysis if they have an able gaming rig. However, if you're more concerned with performance, then you're out of luck, as even high end PC users reportedly have experienced framerate issues, which is the fault of the game and  not hardware. I have a GTX 1070 graphics card with 8 GB of video memory which massively surpasses the game's hardware issues and was able to run the game fine fro the most part. Bizarrely, the vertical sync settings locked my framerate to 50 6PS despite my monitor supporting 60 FPS, but this didn't bother me. What did bother me is that the framerate briefly dropped below 30 FPS in the most intense battle in the game and didn't exceed the low 40s to mid 30s range until the mission was over. As for the console version, I  encountered some bizarre bugs on the 360 such as wreckage of houses floating in midair and soldiers being unable to stop using mounted guns, but there was nothing game-breaking. Last but certainly not least, the mission Ascension in which you control a helicopter is surprisingly absent from the console version, possibly due to it often being regarded as the worst segment of the game.

Also available on Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3

ESRB: M (PARENTAL WARNING: This game contains intense violence, strong language, and moderate amounts of realistic blood) Content: Blood, Strong Language, and Violence Price $19.99 (Download)