The Single player campaign and facing off
against bots makes for a nice distraction but one which soon becomes boring.
Some characters do need some balancing tweaks, and the absence of Taco Bandits does sadden me greatly, but the inclusion of six new character classes as well as the ability to play offline
against bots makes up for these slight missteps for now.
Not exact matches
The movie takes place a couple of years after the end of 2011's «Transformers: Dark of the Moon,» but there have been some changes
made; despite the alien - robot - truck - thingies having saved the world, the U.S. government is now
against all
bots because they wrecked Chicago in the process, so now we've got Kelsey Grammer as a secretive C.I.A. powerhouse doing a purge on all Transformers — OR IS HE?
To
make matters worse, these baddies have hacked the automated security
bots and turned them
against the citizens of Land's End.
6 classes
make up the game, a co-operative mode named Blitz will pit you and up three others
against waves of
Bots as you defend the MoneyBall.
I do like how the game will only ever
make you wait for about ninety seconds before giving you a match
against bots, meaning you can still gain the exp you don't in skirmish games without having to wait ages for players, its great for the types of people that aren't big on multiplayer, each vehicle has unlockable skins, voice lines, tombstones to mark deaths and emotes for bragging rights, the game also features a leveling system with loot boxes for unlockable gear and titles at each level up, meaning there are always rewards for even the casual player to earn which is great for replay value.
You can play games
against bots, which are certainly good enough to
make this a viable single - player game (although it's disappointing that you can't include
bots in multiplayer games).
The small screen and huge maps
make it hard to control all of your Cubemen, especially
against bots.
To
make up for it, battle mode also had a single - player option in which you fought
against three AI
bots.
However, companies continue to
make novel arguments around unauthorized access, claiming that a
bot scraping their site
against their wishes should count as a violation of the CFAA,
making it a felony.