There are
a lot of military shooters under the EA umbrella, and who knows what Respawn will come up with.
Not exact matches
You can definitely tell it's a lower budget game but it's easy to see that the developers put a
lot of effort in making this a decent stealth
military shooter.
The folks at New World Interactive have made some solid
military shooters in the past and Day
of Infamy has flown under a
lot of radars, just like Insurgency did back in the day.
Bungie, the developer
of the game, and the team responsible for the epic Halo series
of shooters, has clearly done a
lot of research to build its fiction - the Destiny world is a rich amalgam
of myths and fantasy tropes; the alien races that you fight — the Fallen, the Hive, the Vex — all have
military hierarchies and back stories inspired by Tolkien, Asimov and a dozen other genre writers, as well as Roman and Medieval history.
There was a
lot of speculation regarding the drop in sales, such as being forced to compete with EA's heavy hitting
military shooters, Battlefield 1 and Titanfall 2, in the same release window; as well as general lukewarm reception to the aesthetic choice
of the latest entry.
«At the time there had been a
lot of what we felt were fairly lazy «me too»
military shooters.
PUBG looks a
lot more like the standard
military shooter we've grown accustomed to through games like Call
of Duty and Battlefield.
The variety in art design is something I really appreciated as a
lot of shooters tend to focus on somewhat bland,
military style environments or simple space station backdrops, but the gorgeous landscapes, cloudy skies and installations
of Ikaruga all look and feel unique and are quite lovely at times.