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Call of Duty: Black Ops Review

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The Good

  1. I cannot express how much this game was not what i expected

  2. If you don't love the multiplayer then try the Kino der toten on zombies!

Chris Watters
on

Call of Duty: Black Ops bears the series' standard superbly, delivering an engrossing campaign and exciting competitive multiplayer.

The Good

  • Thrilling variety throughout campaign  
  • Fractured story creates an intriguing atmosphere  
  • New multiplayer currency system is invigorating  
  • Combat training lets anyone enjoy multiplayer excitement  
  • Theater lets you share and enjoy triumphs and failures.

The Bad

  • Short campaign.

When a franchise consistently delivers massively popular, high-quality games, each new entry in the series comes laden with expectation. Call of Duty: Black Ops has some big shoes to fill, but it does so admirably. The engrossing campaign is chock-full of exciting, varied gameplay and drips with intrigue and intensity. The excellent multiplayer boasts some invigorating new features, and the new combat training mode finally gives novices a way to enjoy the competitive action without suffering the slings and arrows of outrageously skilled veterans. Cooperative zombie killing and video editing tools help make Black Ops the most robustly featured game in the franchise, and though you may have expected it to be the case, this is undoubtedly one of the best shooters of the year.

Just a typical afternoon's jaunt through the Russian countryside.

The single-player campaign is set largely during the 1960s and takes you to Cold War hot spots like Cuba, Russia, and Vietnam. You are an elite covert operative, and your globe-trotting adventures form pieces of a puzzle--a puzzle that your mysterious captors are trying to put together by interrogating you. Each excursion into the field is a memory, and these missions slowly come together to build momentum as each interrogation cutscene puts another piece of the puzzle in place. It's not a very original mechanic, but it gives a coherent context to the action, and a few strong characters and dramatic moments give the story some genuine intrigue. The blurry edges of your consciousness conceal information that must come to light, and the erratic visual effects and eerie audio echoes that accompany your interrogations sometimes bleed into your mission memories, which creates a great tone of uncertainty that plays out in surprising and satisfying ways.

Your interrogation-fueled flashbacks are not beholden to the linear flow of time, allowing your missions cover a wide variety of geography and gameplay. A dramatic breakout from a brutal Soviet prison is one early highlight, and later missions feature frontline conflicts, urban firefights, and mountainous incursions. The environments are richly detailed, and though the campaign is not without a few technical hiccups (like occasionally problematic checkpoint markers and the odd teleporting ally), these moments aren't likely to hinder your enjoyment. In addition to the on-foot action, you use a number of vehicles to achieve your objectives. Some put you in the gunner's seat while others put you behind the wheel, and though the vehicle handling is unremarkable, the thrill of blowing stuff up and speeding through hostile terrain is undeniable. The core running-and-gunning mechanics remain as exciting as ever, and the gameplay variety throughout the campaign keeps the action moving at a great clip.

Though the campaign is a rip-roaring good time, it clocks in at a mere six hours long. The mode that will likely keep you coming back to Black Ops for months to come is, unsurprisingly, the competitive multiplayer. At its core, this is the familiar top-notch Call of Duty action that players have been enjoying for years. You earn experience for doing well in battle, and as you level up, you gain access to new and powerful ways to customize your loadouts. New weapons and maps freshen things up, and one of the new killstreak rewards--an explosive-laden remote-control car--is a delightfully deadly device that embodies the frantic, slightly goofy side of virtual online combat. The key new element, however, is currency. In addition to earning experience for your battlefield performance, you earn Call of Duty points, which you can then spend in a variety of ways. Most perks, weapon attachments, killstreaks, and equipment items are available early on, providing you shell out the points to equip them. Guns are still unlocked as you level up, but again, you have to pony up the points to put one in your loadout. Customization options like face paint, player card backgrounds, and the new create-your-own-icon tool are all accessed by spending points. Having to pay your way gives you more loadout options at lower required levels than in previous Call of Duty games, and the fact that points are so crucial to improving your arsenal makes them as just as sublimely satisfying to earn as experience points.

Chris Watters
By Chris Watters, Editor

With his Apple IIGS as the spark and his neighbor's NES the fuel, Chris Watters' passion for gaming caught fire early. Years later, you can find him aiming down virtual sights, traipsing through fantastical lands, and striving to be grossly incandescent while desperately avoiding sunburns.

10 comments
NinjaMaddy
NinjaMaddy

 Jesus the multiplayer on this games blows ass. Zombie mode gets old fast, especially if you're not in a party

wavelength121
wavelength121

One of the most unfinished games I've ever played. Feels like a beta more than a final product. No "restart checkpoint" option? Getting grenaded to death during cutscenes? Enemies that never miss? Pass, pass, pass. This is not how you make a game, forcing the player down a narrow corridor then punishing them with brutal difficulty the moment they relinquish control.

Dredcrumb9
Dredcrumb9

Black Ops is better than MW2 and 3, and BO2. MW3 is better than BO2. I am one who always like Treyarch's games better than IW's games(mainly because of treyarch's gore and i can't stand war games with no gore) sadly MW3 is better than BO2.

Josh137
Josh137 like.author.displayName 1 Like

Greaet campain, multyplayer, and  co op. This is the best call of duty in my opinion.

Naicco
Naicco

Treyarch did what Infinity Wardidn't (get it?). Black Ops is god-like when compared to MW2, heck it even beats MW3. Black Ops II seems to be shaping up nicely, even the leaked beta information at http://www.blackopsii.com/ shows that the game has been balanced months before it was getting ready to be released.

 

Black Ops 2 will likely sell +20 million copies like the previous ones.

brain20035
brain20035 like.author.displayName 1 Like

just try playing the campaign on Veteran and you will see this game for what it really is!! I name it Crap Ops!! and God forbid there's a second one on the way!! RETARDED friendly A.I., INFINITE respawning enemies, NO thought towards the level design in terms of difficulty balance, etc.

 

P.S. I finished this game's and MW3's campaigns both on Veteran and got all the achievements from both of 'em. As a result I can say MW3>>>>> CRAP OPS!! No comment on the multiplayer though...

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