Going Overground
Games TM|Issue 201

4A GAMES STOPS RELYING ON THE UNDERGROUND AND TAKES ITS PUBLIC TRANSPORT TO AN (ALMOST) OPEN WORLD IN METRO EXODUS

Going Overground

It’s not just the death of single-player games that has been greatly exaggerated – it’s the death of the mid-tier developer, too. Fortunately we have the likes of Ukrainian/ Maltese dev team 4A Games flying the flag for titles that aren’t costing the world to create, but are providing players with incredible worlds to explore… just ones that aren’t quite as big, free and open as the ones Microsoft and Sony spend tens of millions of dollars on to get made. Metro Exodus, the third title in the postapocalyptic depression simulator series, finally makes its move to the surface in a sustained fashion – so is it open world? Not quite.

4A and Deep Silver, the publisher behind Exodus, are both very aware of the limitations they're working with – but that’s not a bad thing. Instead, it means we don’t have to traipse through a large, empty wasteland created just to pad out space, nor do we approach situations without aclear idea of what it is we’re trying to achieve. Basically, Metro Exodus is a linear game, with missions handed out and objectives to complete and a progression from level to level to level until you complete the game. At the same time, 4A is letting players out from the underground they spent the majority of their time in through both Metro 2033 and Last Light, so it just wouldn’t work to strap them in totally linear levels. Instead, Metro Exodus offers players the chance to explore limited – though still large – play areas for each mission, tackling challenges, exploring a little, hunting down new salvage to craft into medkits, gas mask filters, and ammunition, and giving you a few more options to approach beyond a claustrophobic corridor with something definitely horrible at the end of it.

This story is from the Issue 201 edition of Games TM.

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This story is from the Issue 201 edition of Games TM.

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