Review Highlights
Shown below are the important parts of the Review.
Editors' Note: Gamespot.com is known to give the exclusive Editor's Choice award only to the best games that give a unique experience with great gaming value.
9.0/10 Crysis Warhead is a fantastic stand-alone expansion to a superb shooter, and should be played by anyone who likes games with guns. The action is focused and intense • Amazing visuals that look--and run--better than before •| Improved AI makes fighting aliens more fun •| Team Deathmatch has been added, along with a number of great multiplayer maps.
Psycho's brazen confidence does more than just establish a gutsy protagonist: It sets the stage for a more focused and intense series of battles that keep the pace moving more smoothly than before. Warhead offers thoughtful enemy placement and map bottlenecks that keep downtime to a minimum. You can employ your suit's cloak setting and sneak in, or employ hit-and-run tactics, with your suit's speed function.
Warhead is clearly focused on the guns-blazing approach, with its mission objectives, character dialogue, and level design. You'll get besieged by large numbers of enemies, both human and alien. These sequences are exciting and challenging. The easily triggered explosions further intensify these pockets of activity.
Warhead's single-player campaign not only invite multiple play-throughs, it costs only $30 and doesn't require you to own the original. In other words, there is no reason why anyone with a capable PC shouldn't play Crysis Warhead. It's more focused, it's more intense. Play this game.
Both online and off, Warhead is a beauty. You feast your eyes on the swaying vegetation, surging water, and expressive animations. Don't overlook the improved art design, which surpasses the original's [Crysis] oft-sterile look thanks to several striking vistas. The audio is almost as terrific. Various creaks and groans make heading down a narrow glacial pathway all the more harrowing, and weapons sound appropriately powerful. The voice acting is strong, and the understated soundtrack sets the right tone without ever getting in the way.
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