Call of Duty Infinite Warfare has some large boots to fill. Not only is it thirteenth installment in the Call of Duty franchise (oh how the time flies), but it’s also the entry in the series Activision picked to be repackaged with a remastered version of Call of Duty 4: Modern Warfare – an oft-considered high-point for series.
Expectations, as you might imagine, are set high here. As such, a big change was needed.
After four previous entries that flirted outrageously with science fiction concepts and technology, Infinity Ward has finally taken the series full Halo and heads into the darkened depths of space.
This futuristic choice in settings is ironic: despite its high-tech, sci-fi focus, play through the triumvirate of modes that makes up Infinite War and you get a real sense of Infinity Ward’s preoccupation with the past.
Not long into its first hour, Infinite Warfare has you walking solemnly down a corridor lined with the names of history’s fallen – an experience that’s not dissimilar to playing through the game’s five-to-seven hour-long campaign and one that’s emblematic of Infinite Warfare’s entire package.
Look over there, incredibly familiar looking robotic enemies. Hey, is that a level set in a …read more
Source:: techradar.com – Gaming