Set in 2069, Syndicate takes players into a dark, Machiavellian world run without government oversight with many syndicates vying for total dominance of their local market place. With no one to question their intentions or actions, three mega corporations – Eurocorp, Cayman Global, and Aspari – are at the forefront of this brutal war for control of the pivotal American market. In the world of Syndicate, everything is digitally connected, including the people. Players aren’t limited to the weapons in their hands. Through DART 6 bio-chip technology implanted in their head, players can slow down time and breach the digital world around them to take down their foes using a variety of upgradable hacking mechanics. Syndicate’s blend of fast-paced, futuristic, action shooter settings and story combined with innovative chip breach gameplay instantly immerses players in a unique digital world.
“Our goal with Syndicate is to provide a challenging action shooter for today’s gamers as well as fans of the original. I’m sure they will enjoy and recognize the legacy that made it such a classic,” says Jeff Gamon, EA Partners Executive Producer. “Fans of the franchise will recognize many weapons and environments in the game, but in a whole new way. The game also provides a separate and deep 4-player co-op mode featuring missions from the original cult classic, which adds another layer of depth to the overall experience.”
The rise of the FPS was the fall of the Flight Sim. Not sure how you're disputing this.
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Prez wrote on Sep 13, 2011, 09:54:Beamer wrote on Sep 13, 2011, 09:35:
People need to get over a name and look forward to good games.
And you berated me when all I was doing was deriding myself for hoping that a remake would be isometric strategy when I know full well the realities of the market and desires of publishers would almost mandate it be an FPS. I made the mistake of mentioning CoD, and I get a lecture from you, even though I was not "blaming" anyone (aside form myself) or anything other than current market trends. I AM looking forward to good games. I LOVED Fallout 3, and I will be the first to buy XCOM and Syndicate if they are great. That should not preclude me from expressing disappointment that they very may very well have nothing to do with their namesakes beyond generalities and wondering why the devs would bother using the names at all.
Kept in some form... If by that you mean 'kept' but completely butchered in every aspect, then I agree, otherwise no. Fallout 3 is a sad joke in comparison to the original Fallouts in exactly the aspects you list here. They're not even close. NV is closer but still way worse.
Beamer wrote on Sep 13, 2011, 09:35:
People need to get over a name and look forward to good games.
The rise of the FPS was the fall of the Flight Sim. Not sure how you're disputing this.
Prez wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 22:14:
Your statement about Doom killing flight sims only illustrates that you have no clue about the flight sim genre. At all. Yet you still have to run your mouth like you know everything.
Syndicate wasn't really a strategy game. There were some tactics involved in combat, sure, but you spent the bulk of the game walking around and mowing people down.
saluk wrote on Sep 13, 2011, 04:31:Kept in some form... If by that you mean 'kept' but completely butchered in every aspect, then I agree, otherwise no. Fallout 3 is a sad joke in comparison to the original Fallouts in exactly the aspects you list here. They're not even close. NV is closer but still way worse.
Fallout 3 was different from its predecessors, but felt like a modern day take of an older franchise. The most memorable things about fallout for me (the humor, world, moral choices, and character advancement) were kept in some form in fallout 3.
Fallout 3 was different from its predecessors, but felt like a modern day take of an older franchise. The most memorable things about fallout for me (the humor, world, moral choices, and character advancement) were kept in some form in fallout 3. About the only thing missing was the really boring turn based combat vs rats at the start of fallout 1 that almost kept me from playing the game. If your most memorable elements of fallout don't match mine I can see how you would see fallout 3 in that way, but this is kind of the danger of upgrading any franchise. Everyone's idea of what made it work is not the same.
vrok wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 20:58:Alpha Geist wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 16:30:Fallout 3 would be an exception to that rule? LOL, no. Fallout 3 was most definitely a prime example of what you describe. The most horrible franchise bastardization ever, in fact.
WTF mate? Just another Bastardization of a once beloved classic churned out for "the masses."
Oh, and before someone mentions Fallout 3 (and/or NV), that was an exception to the rule. I don't see all the CORE elements that made Syndicate what it was under the guise of "a unique action shooter."
Beamer wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 21:37:Prez wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 19:31:
Everyone wants to make FPS's now that CoD currently rules the revenue roost.
Stop blaming this on things you don't like when ignoring the impact of things you do.
Prez wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 19:31:
Everyone wants to make FPS's now that CoD currently rules the revenue roost.
Alpha Geist wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 16:30:Fallout 3 would be an exception to that rule? LOL, no. Fallout 3 was most definitely a prime example of what you describe. The most horrible franchise bastardization ever, in fact.
WTF mate? Just another Bastardization of a once beloved classic churned out for "the masses."
Oh, and before someone mentions Fallout 3 (and/or NV), that was an exception to the rule. I don't see all the CORE elements that made Syndicate what it was under the guise of "a unique action shooter."
Longjocks wrote on Sep 12, 2011, 19:34:
Doom the text adventure?
Like I said, if you wanted to sell F-150s, you look at the Lightning. Ford's very, very good at marketing their cash cow vehicles and I've yet to see Ford try and cross-segment two completely separate demographics that do not share the same consumer buying trends.