Combat is terrifying and intense as aggressive mutants and
human enemies attempt to kill you.
Not exact matches
This documentary from Matthew Heineman goes behind
enemy lines in Syria to follow the citizen journalist collective «Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently» as they
attempt to expose the
human rights violations by ISIS and fight the terrorist group's misinformation campaigns in their home country.
Finding himself caught in a Martian civil war between two
human - like races trying to annihilate each other, he falls in love with the beautiful princess (Houston's own Lynn Collins) from one of the warring sides and helps them survive the menace of a devastating weapon given to their
enemies from some strange mystical beings
attempting to control the destiny of the planet.
Perhaps even more baffling is that many animals and even some
human opponents have attacks that are much faster than your own lumbering
attempts and that also actually interrupt your own attack animations, stopping your strike in mid-swing so that the
enemies attack can hit yo in the face.
Armed with a variety of loadouts that range from guns to pheromone grenades, you'll face off against
enemy armies and gruesome,
human - eating killers — all while
attempting to capture and control as many bases as possible.
It would have been amazing to have a local competitive multiplayer mode included within Nex Machina in which one player would be the lead character
attempting to destroy every
enemy and save all
humans that lay ahead, while the opposing player controls and positions the robots in an endeavour to destroy the hero and harvest every
human before they can be saved.
The
enemy tanks
attempt to destroy the player's base (represented on the map as a bird, eagle or Phoenix), as well as the
human tank itself.
The
enemy design is so perfectly varied, with unending hordes of wildly different robots all
attempting to mow you and the
humans you need to save down with every kind of Tron inspired laser weapon under the sun.