Reviewers Liked
- Excellent alt-history concept with interesting implications
- Rich, varied campaign
Reviewers Didn't Like
- Bugs and performance issues abound
- Hit and miss stealth mechanics
Homefront: The Revolution feels slapdash, and after the initial fun of learning its systems, drab repetition reveals obvious...
A competent enough shooter, but perhaps a touch too ambitious in its scope. Still, it's a massive improvement on the first...
Here comes the tough part – the verdict. If you're the type of person that enjoys a strong storyline in a game then this isn't the game for you, as even though the concept is interesting, it's not enough to keep you gripped. However, the combat and...
Homefront: The Revolution is a game with flaws. Lots of flaws. Nothing about the game is particularly broken, it's just so many things seem to be done poorly or are just jarringly ill-fitted.At its most basic, Homefront: The Revolution (H:TR) is a first...
Homefront: The Revolution is ultimately plagued by far too many performance issues than should be considered acceptable. While the game shows promising flashes, it falls in the shadow of its predecessor by failing to create a memorable tale of an...
For years, the mainstream games industry has been accused of lacking ambition. The default strategy is to rely on big-budget franchises that get updated on an annual basis – until they stop selling.It's refreshing, then, when a developer attempts...
It's a shame that Homefront: The Revolution is such a technical mess, because when it's working it looks rather good. There's lots of detail to the environments, and were it not for the weird behaviour of the NPCs this might feel genuinely like a city...
Homefront: The Revolution ends up a more fitting sequel than I think anyone could’ve predicted. Like its predecessor, this is a kludged-together mish-mash of trendy design ideas from other, better games, glued to a story that punches far above its weight and aspires to something much greater. It’s a shame the finished product feels like a work-in-progress, because there’s so much to want to like here. I just can’t.
Homefront: The Revolution has a distinctive personality and some decent ideas – but overall, the execution is a mess. Cool weapon customisation options are no substitute for thrilling combat, while the element of exploration is spoilt by poor movement and controls. A storyline that already struggles for credibility isn’t helped by charmless characters and cringe-worthy dialogue, and visual glitches and poor AI only make the game feel unfinished. The result? Homefront: The Revolution is a game with big ambitions that fails to hit the mark.
Somewhere within Homefront: The Revolution --beneath the choppy framerate, the hackneyed narrative, and the half-explored mechanics that are hastily introduced then forgotten just as quickly--exists a solid, cinematic shooter. All the ingredients are...
What does Homefront: The Revolution have in common with Doom (2016)? Both games have spent a substantial amount of time in development hell. But while id's first-person shooter rose past that to give us one of the better games of 2016, Homefront: The...
You have to hand it to Dambuster Studios for at least being able to get a 1.0 build out the door, considering all of the hardships surrounding Homefront: The Revolution‘s development, but unfortunately that’s not enough considering the state of the launch release. While it was nice to see another crack at bringing the Homefront name to prominence, the low quality of the series’ second title will likely mean the end of the Homefront franchise for good.
A successful insurgency swings the people in its favor with fancy ideals and arguments for why things can be better. The real city of Philadelphia knows this all too well. But Homefront's Philadelphia likely would have laid down for the British rather than suffer through another collection mission.
An interesting change of pace for a first person shooter that has some nice ideas and mechanics, but can't quite get everything to...
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