![]() It provides a glimpse of a population living in fear, or places you in scenarios where you have to blend in with the crowd and work covertly – rather than firing at the nearest KPA goons. The Revolution is at its best when it’s trying to simulate what things may be like under such a regime. It’s hampered by its bizarre and spectacularly unlikely premise, but does its best to make a North Korean occupation of America seem possible by altering history with a touch of xenophobic paranoia (if you find Homefront convincing, you might want to don your tin-foil hat and bin your smartphone). I’d also worked my way around the game’s clumsy aiming and slow movement, and the worst of the poor frame rate issues seemed to be behind me. I’d also transformed a crossbow into a flamethrower, which was great for close-quarters fights against the nasty Norks (The Revolution’s dodgy epithet of choice). ![]() I’d opened up a good number of the game’s different zones and built myself some decent custom weapons, converting a battle rifle to a sniper rifle with a handy long-range scope. There was a point whilst playing Homefront: The Revolution that I thought it might actually be getting good. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |