Instead the meat of the game is in its combat, which is constant and occasionally brutal. None of it is really going to stick, it is mostly just loading screen filler that tries to give some purpose for your actions. The story is pretty simple fare, but it is told through a series of comic book-like cut scenes between levels. What ensues are numerous major explosions and some pretty breakneck paced battles. Our protagonist’s name is Fletcher and his sole objective is to eliminate the mechanized threat. Humanity is locked in a struggle with machines that are constantly threatening the people of Bezoar. If you are new to the world of Hard Reset, the story that serves as our backdrop is a pretty basic one where Humans are close to becoming extinct as they take refuge in the last remaining city of Bezoar. It looks cool, but it is often ineffective. It feels tacked on to the original game, which was clearly built with shooting mechanics in mind, not melee weapons. Sadly the katana is not really all that functional. You get a new enemy, a cyber-katana for melee combat that looks just as cool as it sounds, improved pacing and reduced difficulty spikes and more. If you played the original, you probably have a pretty good idea of what to expect. By and large Hard Reset Redux cleans up most of those issues while staying true to what made the original game so popular in the first place. The original title was fast, challenging but had its flaws. Hard Reset Redux by developer Flying Wild Hog and publisher Gambitious Digital Entertainment (now known as Good Shepherd Gaming)-Microsoft Xbox One Review written by Nick.Īs the name Hard Reset Redux alludes to, this is a revision of the popular budget shooting game that released a few years ago.
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