The text and
audio logs do a good job of setting the scene as well.
Not exact matches
All you get really are a few
audio logs and some really pointless artifacts that you pick up and rotate on the analog stick; the latter part being an obvious attempt for the developers to shove the fancy visuals down your throat, had they not somehow
done that already.
And though the narrative is mostly contained in hidden
audio logs throughout the city and has to be pieced together manually, it was mostly well written and compelling when I could be bothered to
do so.
Not every game needs to be BioShock, and not every game needs to tell its story through
audio logs; however, games
do need to remember that it's not what a gamer sees, but what a gamer
does that defines an experience.
These parts of the games are really just for the fans I feel, the game
does offer
audio logs for you to catch up on what has happened in the previous games but you have to go out of your way to find them.
I usually listened to all the
audio logs while
doing side ops so I got a lot of the story from the cassettes between missions.
They
do what
audio logs and journal entries don't — let the player see events as they transpired.
You don't launch a messaging app when you place a video call or
audio call from your call
log.
So, in our case, backing up your data shouldn't be an option for you — if you don't sync your data, you will end up in losing your images, videos,
audio files, market apps, calendar info, saved passwords, call
logs, texts, contacts, internet settings, IMEI / NVRAM and everything else you have recently saved your Z Ultra.
Therefore, if you think that you have important data saved on your phone (like contacts, call
logs, text messages, internet settings, images, videos,
audio files, IMEI / NVRAM, calendar info, etc.), before
doing anything else consider in placing everything in safe hands — just use dedicated apps from Google Play, a computer, a SD card or a cloud storage software.