What you see is what you get with Far Cry 5: Lost on Mars: Plenty of Hurk, a ton of bugs to kill and a straightforward romp on the red planet that'll kill a few hours of your time.Far Cry 5: Lost on Mars was reviewed on PlayStation 455 /...
Far Cry 5: Lost on Mars is a nice tongue in cheek addition to the base game. The story is completely ridiculous but it provides context for Nick Rye and Hurk to bro down on an adventure that can only be born from someone as dumb as Hurk. The gameplay aspect doesn’t fare quite as well as looking for each queen, killing her to recover the energy core and repeating for each of the fifteen queens does become monotonous which can also be said for climbing and reactivating the towers.
Lost On Mars is a strange choice for a Far Cry 5 expansion, and this risky change of scenery doesn't pay off. While it does feature a hilarious fan-favorite character, I just wish the gameplay was as inventive as the dialogue and gun nomenclature. It's...
The first DLC for Far Cry 5 was rather dark in tone and serious in the story it told. Now following on from Hours of Darkness comes the second piece of DLC and a very different tone indeed as the action moves to outer space and lands on Mars. Will say...
Slightly above average or simply inoffensive. Fans of the genre should enjoy it a bit, but a fair few will be left unfulfilled.How we score: The destructoid reviews...
Have you ever wanted to explore outer space with a banging soundtrack, a pile of crazy weapons, and a vicious alien host just waiting to rip you to pieces? Well Lost on Mars Far Cry 5 's second DLC drop is here, and it does just that, sending players on...
Mini-Open-World-Spiel, dem es nur im Ansatz gelingt, aus seinen Einzelteilen ein Ganzes zu formenIm Grunde finde ich Ubisofts Vision für den Far Cry 5 Season Pass bewundernswert. Jeder der insgesamt drei DLCs ist gewissermaßen ein Mini-Open-World-Spiel...
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