Action: Realistic and engaging (except for
the last gunfight where some fool shoots under a car... you'll see why).
Not exact matches
Along the way, players experience the heat of
gunfights and battles, meet a host of unique characters, struggle against the harshness of one of the world's
last remaining wildernesses, and ultimately pick their own precarious path through an epic story about the death of the Wild West and the gunslingers that inhabited it.
While the loudness and occasional stupidity that lingered in the movie where
gunfights would
last for about five minutes straight, there's no doubt that a summer action movie like this is quite a fun experience.
There's little action in between a surprisingly violent
gunfight at the beginning and the climactic battle - at - high - seas between Sparrow and Jones» crews, and while the special effects are quite effective, these sequences just don't have the inventive thrills of the
last films.
Most fights or
gunfights really only
last a minute or so, and these follow that template most of the time — though in this case, short means brutal.
At once an epic account of an improbable romance and a retelling of an iconic American tale, The
Last Woman Standing recalls the famed
gunfight at the O.K. Corral through the eyes of a spunky heroine who sought her happy ending in a lawless outpost — with a fierce will and an unflagging spirit.
Though I can't pass judgment before playing the finished game, which for all we know could elevate Michael Bay parody to Kaufman-esque levels of genius, I can tell you that the
last thing gamedom needs is another nightclub
gunfight level.
I can never get enough of the
gunfights in Max Payne and whenever you take down the
last enemy you get this slow motion kill cam where you can just keep pumping rounds into the guy until he falls and it is just awesomely gory and satisfying.