III was completely covered in snow and ice, and humans were struggling to colonize the frozen world. If you go into this game, go into it with the intent of joining up with your friends to slay moon-sized monsters, and enjoy one of gaming’s top co-op experiences.Ten years have passed since the events that took place in Lost Planet.
LOST PLANET 2 CHARACTERS MOVIE
Playing Lost Planet 2 for the story is like going to a movie to watch the credits. With faceless characters, a story that bounces confusingly from blizzards in the tundra to jet packing in outer space, and an ending that makes no sense whatsoever, the fiction mostly serves as a vehicle to show environment transitions. Some of the firefights remain uninspired shooting galleries, and I would much rather battle a spastic monster than a motionless space soldier, but some of the human-based battles are among the game’s overall best. While offering more monsters and bigger set piece moments, Capcom has also addressed the dullness of the human-against-human battles. When stacked up against the original title, the gameplay is tighter across the board. The grappling hook makes a return from the first game, and while it is called upon often, it is never used for frustrating do-or-die vertical navigation. The gameplay mechanics are tuned nicely, allowing players to feel comfortable with the game’s wide variety of weapons and vehicles from the moment they are first introduced. With most of Lost Planet 2’s weapons being bigger than the characters, the game offers a wallop with its gunplay and stands on its own as a respectable shooter. The low-gravity map needs to be seen by every multiplayer fanatic out there. The game’s jumbo-sized weapons and mechs dish out highlight reel-worthy kills, and the map designs factor in both weapon types and teammate strategies. Player skill levels are gauged nicely through the ranking system, and the variety in maps and modes keeps this experience fresh. The hefty reward system crosses over into the game’s competitive component.
With hundreds of items to secure, Lost Planet 2 is a game that I foresee being a part of my daily gaming rotation for a long time. The hand cannon I unlocked became a point of jealously for my party, and my title “Undercover Perv” always brought a laugh from new players. I found the character customization to be incredibly rewarding, almost addictively so. On top of this, performing well in a level raises your overall rank, a feat periodically rewarded with new armors. The campaign follows a tight linear path, yet I found myself wanting to replay levels not just to relive an amazing boss battle, but to earn credits that I could deposit into a slot machine to unlock new weapons, abilities, emotes, and noms de guerre for my character. With player-based strategies tied to almost every combat scenario and gameplay mechanic, Capcom has created a co-op experience with a unique resonance that proves to be as engaging as Left 4 Dead’s survival tactics. Standard combat calls upon players in different ways, such as asking your teammates to provide diversionary tactics so that you can repair your mech (known in-game as a Vital Suit). In one such battle, one player is tasked with manning a cannon, the second fetches ammo, the third operates a crane, and the fourth calls out the boss’s location while keeping an eye on the vessel’s coolant systems. While offering a visual feast, the monster menagerie’s greatest contribution is creating nerve-shattering fights for co-op teams of four players.Īlthough Lost Planet 2 can be played as a single-player game (with three unreliable, wandering AI bots standing in for players), most challenges call for a high level of coordination between the four teammates. They put on a stylish, ferociously outlandish spectacle, thrashing and gnashing everything in their path as explosions and visual effects dance chaotically in their wake. With the thirst for human blood driving these foul beasts, they rampage through sun-soaked jungles, engulf mile-long trains in a single bite, and evoke as much awe as they do terror. Lost Planet 2 hides its human characters beneath helmets and lumbering armor – never once letting them develop identifiable personalities – and lets the monsters take center stage. Now this is what a monster hunting game should be like.