Remember when the games market was saturated with World War 2 shooters? Well, could we be headed towards an era in which World War 1 could be the popular choice for first person shooters?
Remember when the games market was saturated with World War 2 shooters? Well, could we be headed towards an era in which World War 1 could be the popular choice for first person shooters?
Battlefield 1 takes a huge risk in abandoning it's more modern/future setting for a step back to World War 1. With the likes of COD IW and Titanfall 2 soon upon us, it's good to see Battlefield take a big risk…but does it pay off?
When the opposition pushes all of its war assets toward one beachhead, sometimes it's smarter to avoid that fight altogether and make headway by creating another front. While Call of Duty, Titanfall, Halo, Destiny, Gears of War, and many other shooters compete in a sci-fi battle royale, DICE instead...
The umpteenth entry in the Battlefield series, but the first to be set in World War I, Battlefield 1 proves that the setting of a first-person war game ultimately means very little.
Only in Battlefield 1 will you bring a horse to a tank fight and squad-up with your allies in epic multiplayer battles with up to 64 players.
Battlefield's formula for large-scale, objective-driven warfare is as intense and theatrical as ever against the haunting, archaic backdrop of World War I. Battlefield 1's single-player campaign is a short but pleasantly surprising anthology of small, human stories that does a good job spotlighting...
In Battlefield 1 we go back approximately 100 years to see and experience the Great War through many different perspectives.
After its announcement, there were concerns that Battlefield 1 would simply feel like a re-skinned version of Battlefield 4 set in the early 20th century, but within the first few minutes of playing it, I knew it was just the opposite.
The Battlefield series has been constantly evolving over the last decade. The series has taken us from the World War II era, to Vietnam, to modern times,
My fondest memory of war was, as a kid, sitting in front of what felt like a giant movie theatre screen in my uncle's living room staring up at Tom Hanks on Omaha Beach, paralyzed, surrounded by death, destruction and chaos.
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