A decent concept, that has been marketed and presented totally wrong.
A decent concept, that has been marketed and presented totally wrong.
Set in an alternate history London, The Order: 1886 serves as a visually stunning, mysterious blend of film and game and yet despite its technical prowess does little to galvanize another third-person, cover-based shooter littered with quick-time events (QTEs).
When you're a development studio that comes up with an alternate history, based in one of the most iconic cities in the world, you best make darn sure that you have some great set pieces in place to make the story believable.
A graphical showcase | One or two really awesome weapons
Absolutely no replay value | Boring and generic | Dull characters
Good game p4 only which can lead to rarity. Graphics are good, sound is good, game play is goes well with the story line. Very satisfied.
Its a fun but short game, got it from the PS Sale and it was a great value. Thanks play-asia. PS. No problems playing in english on a US console.
The Order: 1866 is a full price retail game that last 6 hours at best, and it offers zero replay value – that certainly is a problem. The reason I am starting this review with such a statement is that it's but one single complaint of many to level against the game.
Join the Knights of the Round Table. Fight off half breeds and rogue human organisations. Superb graphics and game world to explore. Use advanced steampunk technology to counter the threat. Available only on PlayStation 4.
Visually impressive – Steampunk London design
Actual gameplay is minimal – Fight humans more than half-breeds
The Order: 1886 ends by leaving itself wide open for a sequel (The Order: 1887, one presumes), and I'm interested enough in the series' premise that I'll definitely give it a look.
Ready At Dawn came out of nowhere with the announcement of The Order: 1886 during E3 2013, a title in development for over three years prior. The studio, which previously worked on several PSP titles and had their hand in making the God Of War Collection on PlayStation 3, finally has their first...
The first time I saw The Order: 1886 , the PlayStation 4 exclusive by Ready at Dawn, I was stunned by the presentation. This was way back at a pre-E3 event in Santa Monica last year. The 19th-century Victorian England-era setting was super crisp.
Easily one the best-looking games ever made; letterbox format totally works; Brief; almost unnoticeable load times; Story takes itself seriously with solid voice acting
Gameplay is beyond generic; not fun; Length of campaign overstays its welcome even at less than 7 hours; Not much incentive to play it over; Tags
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