| Red Faction: Guerrilla Walkthrough Walk thru Guides, Red Faction: Guerrilla Game Help, Red Faction: Guerrilla FAQs (PC PS3 XBOX 360) Source : http://www.wonderdogsoftware.com Author : JACK TRIPPER Published on : June 04, 2009 |
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Get the game walkthrough guide for : Red Faction: Guerrilla for PC, PS3 & XBOX 360. Absolutely all online walkthrough strategy guides are right here!The original Red Faction was by far one of my favorite "lite" deathmatch engines I ever played (after being a Quake and Quake II junky for years)... NOW THQ has answered the 'so 2008' call for this games revival update. This is truly an amazing game, with amazing dynamics and realspace physics that just blow me away (heh literally)..
The tech is effortlessly stunning, far ahead of anything offered by competitors like Fracture and Battlefield: Bad Company. But most importantly, Volition has nailed the feel of destruction: simply assaulting a concrete wall with a sledgehammer - your default, and devastatingly effective, weapon - is a cathartic delight with palpably satisfying impact. If, like me, you've fantasised about rampaging through the crockery section in Ikea with a hammer, this must be as close as a standard joypad can get to how you'd imagine it to feel. Objects disintegrate in a remarkably realistic manner. So much so, that a basic recognition of the laws of physics helps, as I discover having torn through the walls of a building from the inside, only for it to collapse on top of me. There is method to the mayhem. To recap on the story, Red Faction: Guerrilla is set 50 years after the events of the original. Back on Mars (RFII was Earth-based), you play Alec Masson, a miner who travels to the Red Planet to work with his brother. The Earth Defence Force, liberator of the original, has since turned State aggressor and declared martial law. "Free Mars is over," you're told during an introductory cut-scene. Suffice to say, something bad happens and you are quickly recruited into the resistance to fight back against the EDF. Guerrilla is split into six large areas, the goal being to drive the EDF from each, and ultimately free Mars. You start each section from a safehouse, where you can change your weapon loadout, upgrade equipment (by trading in salvage collected in the wake of destruction), hop into a vehicle, or start a new mission. As this is an open-world game, it's pretty much up to you what you do and where you go. A map details the various missions and side-activities available to you: your focus is to destroy EDF-guarded areas and complete missions linked to the main plot.
A more simplistic example comes with shooting down metal towers from a gun emplacement, again against the clock. It's relatively dull, in truth, but the point is that Volition is promising variety in gameplay throughout - essential if the single-player is to last the 18-20 hours claimed for it. Two things you'll want to keep your eye on are civilian morale and EDF control. The latter depletes, naturally, as you complete more missions; the former introduces an interesting dynamic whereby the higher the morale, the more likely you are to be aided in missions and raids by NPCs. Morale builds the more you strike back at the EDF (including destroying propaganda-spouting signage), but takes a dive every time a rebel is killed. The EDF. They won't look so tough once you've parked a tank on their faces. The most thrilling moment of my few hours with the single-player comes during the final mission of the first area, Parker. To facilitate your faction's escape to a new location, you must distract the EDF, which you do by hopping behind the wheel and rampaging across the environment, tasked with knocking out a number of communication arrays.
It's a markedly different dynamic and atmosphere to the studios I've visited clustered around major US cities. There's much to be said for the buzz and the thrill of the big city; but it can also create a restlessness that sees staff impatiently flit from company to company in search of the next creative rush. Nothing wrong with that; but it wouldn't do for a project like Red Faction: Guerrilla. The last title in the series, Red Faction II, released seven years ago. Volition has been toiling away on a sequel now for the past five, but it's striking to note that for most of that time the studio wasn't even sure if it was going to work. "I'm impressed we've got this far," admits lead designer James Hague. "There were lots of points where I thought, no way, this is never going to work." The eureka moment came only "in the past 18 months" when, after years of heavy-duty engine building, it became clear that they had a game idea and structure that actually worked. Although we're not quite talking Duke Nukem Forever here, dedicating years of your life to something you're never actually certain is going to be released must require immense patience and self-discipline. But opting to settle into the slow lane of Champaign probably helps.
The biggest issue has been technical. The first two Red Faction games were solid if routine first-person shooters but for one element: Geo-Mod. Based on proprietary tech, this allowed players to wreck the environment. But as every encounter with an invisible wall tells us, promise your audience the world, and anything less leads to disappointment. So the vision for Guerrilla was clear enough: create a world in which practically everything can be crushed, broken, bent, exploded, clobbered and toppled. If it's in your way, you should be able to smash it to smithereens. And so years have been spent evolving the studio's destruction tech to a point where this is not only feasible, but implementable in a way that's fun and, crucially, doesn't stagger drunkenly at three frames per second. And you know what? They've done it. The electricity gun spices up the action if you're bored with bullets and hammer-blows. The team has argued all along that the shift in perspective was about being able to take in as much of the havoc you wreak on the environment; and this is a game where you'll want to savour every last thwack of metal on concrete.
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