![]() It leads to other inconsistencies as well. Leaving character creation to chance also leads to characters who just don’t seem to have voices that match their models. I’d say they actually look worse than the characters in the first Watch Dogs released in 2014. For one thing, character models are pretty bad in the Xbox One X version of the game I played. Procedural generation comes with its own set of problems. I actually enjoyed many of these missions more than the main campaign, which quickly grows repetitive with countless missions that have you infiltrate a secure areas to hack something before making a quick escape. ![]() If your potential DedSec member has a positive opinion of you, you can initiate a recruitment mission, which might involve information gathering, destroying incriminating information, or rescuing one of their friends from Albion. But some characters also come with disadvantages like poorer stealth abilities or weaker damage resistance. These abilities range from powerful new weapons and vehicles to drone summons and unique combat abilities. Recruitment begins by pressing a button to learn a few basic facts about a character and the skills they’ll offer DeadSec. For as much attention as Ubisoft put on the ability to play as anyone you meet on the streets, it never feels very fleshed out, and isn’t all that different from similar systems in the State of Decay and Shadow of Mordor games. I started my playthrough with Riordan Doyle, a pistol-packing debt collector with a deadeye, but quickly leveled up to unlock more than a dozen other operatives with a variety of skills. Ultimately, the plot feels as hollow as the many interchangeable characters you’ll play as. Ubisoft initially described Legion as a vision of post-Brexit London, but while hot button issues like fake news, illegal immigration, and National Health Service funding are regularly referenced, Legion seems too afraid to take any sort of stance on these topics or satirize them like other games such as the much bolder Grand Theft Auto. The story is largely formulaic and at times struggles to make a point. Things seem pretty grim until you choose a new operative to rebuild DedSec and unravel the conspiracy behind Zero Day. ![]() ![]() (Apparently every story involving terrorists and London needs to reference the Gunpowder Plot in some way.) Wolfe succeeds in saving Parliament, but loses his life in the process while failing to stop other bombs set up around the city.ĭedSec is blamed for the bombings and the British government quickly hires the private security company Albion to establish a high-tech surveillance state covering every inch of London. Legion opens with Dalton Wolfe, an operative from DedSec, the hacker group featured in the previous two games, dispatched beneath the Houses of Parliament to defuse bombs set up by the rival hacker group Zero Day. Watch Dogs: Legion’s hook is the ability to recruit and play as any character in London, but this new feature is really more representative of a series in the midst of an identity crisis. ![]()
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