Modern Warfare 2 review in progress The ultimate weapon is your QA team Dexerto

Modern Warfare 2 review in progress The ultimate weapon is your QA team Dexerto

Modern Warfare 2 review in progress – The ultimate weapon is your QA team - Dexerto

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about the authorBrad NortonBrad is Dexerto's Australian Deputy Editor, covering all aspects of the gaming industry, online entertainment, and broader pop culture. With a history in the Oceanic esports scene, Brad has also helped elevate many of the region's top pro players and content creators. You can contact Brad at [email protected] or on Twitter: @GoGoYubari__

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Modern Warfare 2 review in progress – The ultimate weapon is your QA team

Brad Norton Published: 2022-10-22T08:12:36 Updated: 2022-10-22T20:41:09Modern Warfare 2Activision In typical Call of Duty fashion, Modern Warfare 2 (the second one) serves up another dose of popcorn-flick-style FPS goodness that’s as fun to look at as it is to play. While this year’s campaign is another solid entry in the franchise, with diverse mission types, interesting new characters and a globetrotting story, a handful of critical flaws at launch presents more of a fizzle than a bang as the single-player experience falls short of making an impact. If you’ve ever played a campaign in the CoD series, you know exactly what to expect when jumping into another. All are fairly brief depictions of certain theatres of war as twisting narratives lead you from one explosive set piece to the next. If you’re looking for Academy-level writing or truly innovative game design features, you won’t find it here. But if you know what you’re getting yourself into and you’re eager for a more laidback action game with the sharpest FPS mechanics on the market, Modern Warfare 2 certainly doesn’t disappoint. It’s another non-stop adrenaline rush that’ll have you dangling from a helicopter in one sequence before donning a ghillie suit and picking off targets from a distance in the next. Each chapter is varied yet familiar, as is much of the returning cast in this reimagining of the original MW series. While characters here share names and appearances with their counterparts from two console generations back – including those present in the first Modern Warfare 2 (how good are naming conventions?) – these are all new experiences and storylines. For the most part, their journey in 2022 is just as enjoyable as the one we experienced back in 2009. However, a number of significant bugs and deeply frustrating oversights throughout prevent the full campaign from connecting with all of its ambitious shots. Infinity Ward’s sights are just off target, resulting in a decent single-player chapter but one that never quite reaches stellar.

Modern Warfare 2 Key Details

Developer: Infinity Ward Price (PS5): $69.99 USD / £64.99 GBP / $109.95 AUDRelease Date: October 28Platforms: PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X S, PC

Modern Warfare 2 release trailer

I ve covered wars you know

Taking place after the events of Modern Warfare’s 2019 reboot, this sequel brings Captain Price’s new iteration of Task Force 141 into the spotlight. With the likes of Gaz, Soap, and Ghost all joining the fight too, the accomplished group is thrown into the midst of the latest terrorist threat. Militants in Iran, members of the Cartel, Russian operatives, seemingly all corners of the globe are linked to the central narrative, essentially pitting our batch of familiar faces against the world. The campaign starts with a bang and doesn’t let off the gas until credits roll, as you would expect. It’s a frantic journey from one continent to another as the good guys try to outwit the bad and claw their way to victory tooth and nail. You assume the role of many in Task Force 141, constantly changing perspective from mission to mission as the narrative demands. As a whole, Modern Warfare 2 tells a competent story that helps push the rebooted series forward once again, but this second entry avoids any major risks, playing it straight and narrow while setting up the next act. While the writing is about what you would expect here, some key moments might leave you scratching your head. Although this game serves as the sequel in a new string of Modern Warfare games, it’s almost as if characters recognize parts of their history from the other timeline. Two recently aligned protagonists might share some cheeky dialogue as though they’ve known each other for years. Others may scoff when they hear a particular name, as though it means something more to them. Although this might have been intended to give experienced players a wink here and there, it’s more confusing than anything. It blurs the lines between the original and the reboot, placing the series in somewhat of a grey area where characters are supposed to be wound back to the start but continue to acknowledge parts of their rewritten history. ActivisionGhost returns in Modern Warfare 2 and he kind of remembers some of what happened 13 years ago, but not really. Maybe. Similarly head-scratching is the sequel’s decision to move away from key characters that led the charge in 2019. Farah does get involved once again, though fans looking to see more of her story post-liberation in Urzikstan will be disappointed by the brevity of her appearance. Meanwhile, Alex, Modern Warfare’s lead character, doesn’t get a second of screen time in MW2. It’s here where things get even more complicated. In the closing moments of the 2019 reboot, Alex seemingly sacrificed himself for the cause, remaining in the heart of battle to ensure explosives went off as planned. While that could have been a fitting end for the character back then, developers made the choice to overrule this thread and bring Alex back as part of Warzone’s seasonal narrative. Now, three years on from the first MW and the events that followed in the battle royale, it almost comes across like Infinity Ward didn’t want to acknowledge the story’s progression in Warzone. Which, in some respect, fair enough. Hardly anyone is playing the online BR for its story and fans of the single-player journey definitely won’t be caught up if they missed a random cutscene from the season three patch back in 2020. The choice to all but ignore what millions experienced over the past few years is still a surprise. Perhaps we’ll see Alex make a return in Warzone 2 alongside some other iconic figures in the franchise but, as it stands today, there’s a questionable gap in the campaign experience at launch that can’t be patched.

CoD will always be CoD

When it comes to moment-to-moment gameplay, CoD is the king of the FPS genre for good reason. Very few titles come close to matching its refined mechanics or its incredible production value. From the snappy shooting we all know and love to the outrageous set pieces that could only fit in this franchise, moving through each chapter never grows dull. That’s especially true in Modern Warfare 2 thanks to the many diverse locations and mission types on offer. Whether you’re sneaking through the streets of Amsterdam with syringes full of poison or carefully clearing properties neighboring the Mexico-United States border, the game’s captivating presentation never ceases to impress. Graphical fidelity is top-notch here as you would expect from a title that employs the efforts of thousands around the globe across a dozen studios. ActivisionNo one can fault Modern Warfare 2 for its visuals. The game is simply stunning. Piggybacking off the hype surrounding 2019’s Clean House mission, Modern Warfare 2 doubles down on the breach and clear recipe. Almost every mission features a close-quarters sequence wherein you and a few others trawl through a house room by room, checking behind doors and under every bed for targets along the way. Just as it was in the original, this approach to combat is sensational and seldom lets up. Each time around you’re on the edge of your seat, anxiously scanning the area for a hole in the wall that might be resting a gun barrel, a piece of clothing sticking out from behind cover, or even an enemy waiting to jump you from behind a shower curtain, it’s always intense and always a highlight. New to this entry are a few systems and features that mostly feel half-baked at best and infuriating at worst. Dialogue options and crafting mechanics certainly fit the former description, with both only becoming prevalent in the second half of the game and feeling entirely inconsequential. Players are given three or four lines to pick from in a handful of moments, but more often than not, they’re irrelevant and do little to advance the story. For the latter, Infinity Ward has all but hit copy and paste on the flow of The Last of Us. In a few missions toward the end of the game, you’ll be without weapons for a decent stretch of time. In their place, your job is to gather scraps from the environment and craft a few deadly tools. Metal, wax, glass, you name it, you can pick it up and use it to build a makeshift smoke bomb, explosive, or shiv. While it may sound neat on paper, these sequences were often more tedious than anything. Players are shoehorned into finding a certain piece of equipment from their surroundings, rather than actually moving forward and focusing on the mission’s specific objective. ActivisionBreaching and clearing is the name of the game in most Modern Warfare 2 missions. When it comes to a deeply frustrating feature, the arrival of armored enemies (think Juggernauts but more agile) stands out. At first, hearing the familiar Warzone ‘crack’ was nifty and a strong audio callback. With just one or two of these targets present in early combat rooms, it didn’t present an issue. But as the story progresses, these characters become more and more common, to the point where you’re eventually thrown into rooms full of them. It’s extremely tiring, especially with limited ammo. Making matters worse is the fact you yourself can only armor up once or twice in the entire campaign. As for the opposite, there’s one new addition that did actually improve the experience, Modern Warfare 2’s campaign gives players a backpack. No really. It’s just a simple backpack that allows you to swap between various types of lethal and tactical equipment on the fly and it is fantastic. Rather than having to drop a throwing knife to equip a stun grenade, for instance, you can just carry both and trade them out as you need. It’s so basic yet so incredibly effective and we can only hope this feature makes the jump across to Warzone 2 as well.

A frustratingly buggy campaign at launch

Although a good amount of the Modern Warfare 2 campaign rolled on without a hitch, a number of game-breaking issues halted progress at various points. In the worst cases, this led to full mission replays, as key sequences broke apart and failed to function as intended. Take for instance, the Violence and Timing mission roughly halfway through the narrative. In this ambitious level mirroring a sequence from Uncharted 2, Gaz is flung from a helicopter and forced to commandeer a vehicle down below. What ensues is designed to be a fluid mix of both in-vehicle gameplay and the regular on-foot shooting mechanics. ActivisionDespite a few good additions, Modern Warfare 2 had a tendency to fall apart due to its many moving pieces. Not only are you able to lean out the window of your vehicle to fire at enemies, but you can freely climb out to the roof for a better shot. If your ride gets damaged, you’re supposed to jump to another and continue forward without much of a hassle. However, that wasn’t the case at all during my playthrough. On my first go around, the camera locked up halfway through. From that point on, my reticle was stuck when leaning out a window and I could only hipfire, meaning I had to line up perfect shots from within the car before taking them. As you can imagine, this only worked for so long. Having to restart from 20 minutes back, I then made it most of the way through a second attempt before disaster struck again. This time, my vehicle was on the verge of exploding right after a checkpoint hit. For whatever reason, exiting the car instantly led to a mission failure. No time on the roof, no chance to find another car, just a swift game-over screen before reloading the checkpoint and having it happen all over. It was an inescapable cycle that led to yet another full restart. Fortunately, the third time worked a treat, but that particular mission was just one of a few I had to restart due to malfunctioning mechanics or flawed checkpoints. A game that should take around five hours on an average run pushed me just north of seven, with a good chunk obviously spent replaying the same slice. ActivisionTime spent with MW2’s campaign is brief and mostly forgettable, but a few highlights will certainly stand the test of time. Modern Warfare 2’s campaign won’t blow you away with its storytelling and there’s no denying it could’ve used a few more passes through the QA team before going live, but when it’s firing on all cylinders, there’s still an enjoyable single-player experience on offer here. It’s one that feels designed to set up a more promising third act in the coming years. For the time being, we’re still awaiting the full launch of Modern Warfare 2 before giving our final impressions on multiplayer and coop. Be sure to check back on October 28 for a fully in-depth breakdown.

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