Gears 5 – What The Coalition Didn’t Tell You About Campaign Mode

You need a javascript enabled browser to watch videos.

Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.

This video has an invalid file format.

Sorry, but you can’t access this content!

Please enter your date of birth to view this video

By clicking ‘enter’, you agree to GameSpot’s
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Gears 5 – 10 Waves Of Intense Co-Op Horde Mode Gameplay

You need a javascript enabled browser to watch videos.

Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.

This video has an invalid file format.

Sorry, but you can’t access this content!

Please enter your date of birth to view this video

By clicking ‘enter’, you agree to GameSpot’s
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Gears 5 – The Deadliest New Weapons

You need a javascript enabled browser to watch videos.

Please use a html5 video capable browser to watch videos.

This video has an invalid file format.

Sorry, but you can’t access this content!

Please enter your date of birth to view this video

By clicking ‘enter’, you agree to GameSpot’s
Terms of Use and Privacy Policy

Gears 5 Review In Progress – A Beneficial Mutation

You wouldn’t be blamed for thinking that the sixth game in the Gears of War franchise is another entry from the middle of the original trilogy’s Locust War. Shooting gooey reptilian monsters, exploring ruined labs, and chainsawing other players are the things Gears does best, and Gears 5 squarely focuses on strengthening those core elements. The underpinnings of the series haven’t been tweaked much, but The Coalition adds a lot of new stuff in its second game since taking the reins on the Gears of War franchise. While Gears 5’s story is largely obsessed with the past, and to some degree, Gears 5 stays there too, the new additions help revitalize the series’ best old ideas.

And there are a lot of new additions. On the cooperative multiplayer side, characters get new abilities so that they each play a little differently. Expansive progression systems in competitive and co-op multiplayer draw from games like Fortnite and Call of Duty to give you a constant feeling of advancement. Even the story campaign has something of an RPG-like progression system, as well as a few wide-open areas that change up the series’ traditionally linear approach. The Coalition hasn’t moved far from the fundamentals of Gears gameplay–you still move deliberately, diving between cover positions behind chest-high walls and other debris to pop out and shoot at enemies with a variety of guns. Carefully timing your active reloads gets you the most out of your firepower, and you’re always searching the battlefield for new weapons better suited to the enemies you’re taking down. Gory executions and melee kills are still essential at close quarters. But the game has grown significantly, with a free Battle Pass-like system, hero shooter-inspired characters, and other improvements that are all welcome evolutions for a 13-year-old franchise.

While the new elements don’t stop Gears 5 from feeling true to the earlier games in the franchise, at least in its 12-hour story campaign, there’s also a lot of ground that’s being revisited. The Locust are back, but they’re called the Swarm now. You’ll spend some time trying to convince straggly bands of surviving humans to join forces with the fascist COG army to fight the Swarm, but these folks aren’t called the Stranded anymore; they’re Outsiders. Most of the game concerns bringing a franchise superweapon, the Hammer of Dawn, back online to use against your enemies. Gears is undoubtedly back in the same territory it covered with the trilogy that wrapped up back in 2011, and while some of the tools in this war are different, the war has mostly gone unchanged. Gears 5 is weakened somewhat by being mired in the past; there are some strong moments in its campaign, but it struggles to move forward in a way that’s a satisfying continuation of the narrative.

No Caption ProvidedGallery image 1Gallery image 2Gallery image 3Gallery image 4Gallery image 5Gallery image 6Gallery image 7Gallery image 8Gallery image 9Gallery image 10

The story picks up not long after the events of Gears of War 4, in which JD Fenix–son of series poster boy Marcus Fenix–and his pals Del and Kait discovered the Swarm threat and set out to stop it. You’ll mostly just run around shooting various groups of Swarm monsters from behind cover in much the same way you always have in previous games–but Gears 5 breaks things up with a few variations on the gameplay that improve on its predecessors.

Instead of focusing on JD and his relationship with Marcus as in Gears 4, the sequel recenters on Kait, who lost her mother to the Swarm at the end of the last game. Gears 4’s ending suggested that Kait has a connection to the Locust horde that Marcus helped to genocide 25 years ago, and a good portion of Gears 5 is about exploring that connection and uncovering secrets long buried by the COG government.

The first and last Acts are more traditional Gears fare, in that you’re guided through a series of missions that are mostly about taking objectives, backing up other squads, and killing giant monsters. But in the middle of the game, Gears 5 changes the pace with two open segments. You hop aboard a skiff, which is essentially a dogsled with a sail on it, and zip over the terrain of a snowy valley and across a vast desert. These areas feel fundamentally different from past Gears games, allowing you to explore and look for side objectives where you can pick up small subplots of story and grab hidden collectibles and upgrades, advancing the main plot (or not) at your own pace.

The open areas don’t take you too far out of the Gears norm–you won’t be accosted by roaming forces or stuck in a shootout in the middle of the wilderness. Arriving at any point of interest usually sends you on a short mission where you’ll explore a building or wander into an arena filled with enemies. They’re like mini Gears levels that you can take or leave, usually with an ambush to tangle you up and some weapons, upgrades, or a bit of lore waiting at the end.

No Caption Provided

Story On A Small Scale

What’s really enticing about these areas, though, are the many small moments they allow between characters. Act 2 finds Kait and Del on their own as they explore Kabar, a frozen alpine region full of old COG labs and fortifications that you’ll search for Kait’s answers. But the entire segment is fleshed out through a series of character-building conversations between Kait and Del as they hang around together, basically on a shooty road trip. Gears 5’s writing is at its best in these character conversations, and the intimate time spent with characters in Acts 2 and 3 help you feel closer to them. Listening to Kait tell Del what she’s worried she might uncover, or Kait making fun of Del for dropping tons of esoteric knowledge about things like the commercial lumber industry, bring you closer to the characters than any number of battles with AI teammates do.

Kait provides an interesting alternative viewpoint to the proceedings as Gears 5’s protagonist as well. She’s fundamentally an outsider–in the sense of her anti-COG upbringing, her somewhat arms-length relationship with the city-boy soldiers with whom she fights, and her apparent ties to humanity’s greatest enemies. The game doesn’t necessarily spend a ton of time exploring that idea, but in the conversations between Delta squad members, we get a much better sense of the distance Kait feels from her friends.

Unfortunately, the rest of Gears 5’s story is uneven. Though Kait’s desire to find out more about her connection to the Locust is a strong drive to push the narrative forward, Gears 5 pretty much wraps up what feels like her central drive by the middle of the game. The rest is just about Delta cruising around completing various tasks to fight off the growing Swarm threat, while the more personal stuff is left to linger. Exploring the destroyed desert facilities of the COG’s old human enemies, the UIR, is a fun diversion full of a lot of pitched battles, but as far as the characters are concerned, nothing impactful happens outside of a bunch of big action set pieces. Gears 5 plays out its best story moments early, and it ends without doing much with the reveals and turning points it does create.

No Caption Provided

The story ultimately feels somewhat truncated and meandering, but the campaign is still fun to play. Some key changes in the structure do a lot to provide new opportunities in the old framework. Since you’re exploring areas at your own pace, you’ll often come across unaware Swarm soldiers searching for ammo or prepping for combat, which gives you a chance to stealthily take some out. You also have a new set of abilities for your squad to use on the battlefield thanks to Jack, the R2-D2-like robot that follows you around on missions. Jack can zap enemies to injure them, flash enemies to stun them and make them break cover, ping their locations, turn you invisible, and even take over an enemy’s mind for a brief period.

Jack effectively provides Gears 5’s campaign with a progression system, and coupled with the more varied gameplay and some slight squad control in the form of marking targets, he helps take Gears out of its cover-shooter comfort zone somewhat. Quickly swapping through and using Jack’s abilities gives you a chance to make new decisions in combat or take advantage of different ways to play that you couldn’t before, like by activating invisibility to slip through the front lines for a flanking position or using the Stim ability to strengthen yourself so you can melee to death a hulking Swarm Scion.

Jack has a skill tree that lets you improve his abilities along a few different paths, allowing you to tweak his capabilities to better fit your playstyle. He’s also the major reason to complete side missions and search all those nooks, crannies, dead ends, and side areas that litter Gears 5. While those side activities sometimes give a bit of a better understanding of the story or the world, the big reward is almost always an item that helps you improve Jack’s abilities.

No Caption ProvidedGallery image 1Gallery image 2Gallery image 3Gallery image 4Gallery image 5Gallery image 6Gallery image 7Gallery image 8Gallery image 9Gallery image 10

Multiplayer, But More

As with the campaign, The Coalition doesn’t reinvent the series’ standard multiplayer in Gears 5–but much of it sees improvements aimed at adding customization and support for varied playstyles. The franchise’s usual competitive multiplayer is back, where two teams of five players face off, with options segmented into more casual Quickplay and more hardcore Ranked playlists.

Gears 5 multiplayer doesn’t fix what isn’t broken–it’s striking how much Gears 5’s competitive modes feel like, say, Gears of War 3, and are fun in the same ways. Since it isn’t changing the core feel of the gameplay, The Coalition has expanded on it by offering more options for multiplayer, so you can find the modes you like, and metagame progression systems, to make your time feel more meaningful.

Quickplay includes a bunch of different game types that fit the Gears framework, while pushing you to play a little differently in every match. Its modes include classics like King of the Hill, as well as Gears of War 4’s weapon-based Arms Race (a literal race to get kills with a host of different guns) and Dodgeball, in which you can’t respawn unless a teammate kills a member of the opposing squad. The Ranked mode, on the other hand, plays things straighter with simpler modes like Team Deathmatch.

It’s very easy to see the influence live service games have on Gears 5, with an overall level-up system for your multiplayer persona, the ability to unlock more guns for your starting loadouts, and lots of customization options. They’re all of a type similar to what you’d see in something like Fortnite–nothing that would draw you into multiplayer on its own, but plenty to give you new unlocks to chase and to help multiplayer feel like it has more depth than just a series of matches to play. Exactly how big an influence those progression systems have on how multiplayer actually plays is tough to get a sense pre-release, so we’ll be putting in more multiplayer after Gears 5’s launch and will update this review accordingly. It should be noted also that, like live service games, Gears 5 also includes customization items you can grab by spending money on premium currency.

No Caption Provided

Specializing In Co-Op

The bigger refinements come in Gears 5’s co-op modes. Here, Gears 5 furthers an emphasis on teamwork and specialization, and again, the live service influence is apparent.

Horde mode returns, in which five players team up to take on 50 waves of enemies while building fortifications and buying new weapons in between each round. It sees some tweaks to the rules, with elements like shared resources, the ability to spend those resources on character perks to make yourself stronger, and greater character specialization that gives you more of a particular job as you work together to survive. New to the cooperative scene is Escape, in which you race through a Swarm Hive as a squad of three, trying to outrun deadly gas as you find your way out and kill enemies along the way. Escape differs from the other modes in that you have limited weapons and ammo, forcing you to search for more resources as you go and to work together to stay alive, especially on higher difficulties.

Both modes add more ways to engage with Gears 5 on their own, and they share their own live service-style progression systems that let you level up characters, customize their capabilities and loadouts, and generally make them more your own. The characters you choose in both Horde and Escape each have different roles and special abilities, including an Ultimate ability that charges up over time. You can even play as Jack the robot in an almost purely support role, providing something for players who prefer backing up teammates over scoring headshots. On the surface, Horde and Escape play pretty similarly to Gears’ other modes, and it’ll take some advancement through the progression systems to find out just how specific you can get with your character builds and how differently they really play from one another. But the possibilities are there to provide you with fun new ways to think about Gears’ pop-and-shoot gameplay and teamwork.

Gears 5’s additions make the whole package feel denser and more involved–even if it still plays very similarly to Gears games in the past. To some degree, there’s almost too much progression to deal with; it’s a lot to learn and keep in mind, and the character additions don’t always seem to have a big impact on how you play at lower levels. It’s an area that’s tough to gauge without spending more time with Gears 5 multiplayer post-release, and we’ll be digging into that portion of the game more in the coming days before finalizing the review.

No Caption Provided

But what makes Gears 5 work well is that those additions feel like a useful evolution of the core Gears concept, even if a lot of these ideas–like an involved character progression system or a Battle Pass-like rewards path–are also becoming commonplace among shooters. 13 years after the franchise’s first release, The Coalition’s additions to Gears 5 are all things that seem right at home with the elements that give the series its identity. The upshot is there are lots of options, and while you might not play them all, there’s probably something that fits the kind of player you are.

Gears 5 is very much a return of those best elements of Gears of War, but with a focus on making the game feel somewhat more adaptive to your particular ways of playing. Whether you want campaign or co-op, Competitive or Quickplay, there’s an option for you in Gears 5, and plenty of stuff to reward you for time spent and skill gained. Gears 5 might suffer from some of the same storytelling missteps as its predecessors, and it might not venture far out of the past, but the new ideas it brings to the series are all good reasons for fans to return.

The X-Men’s Most Important Mission Ends in Tragedy

Marvel’s epic X-Men relaunch takes a very dark turn this week. Read on to find out what happens as Cyclops leads a team to destroy a Mother Mold factory and prevent the mutant race’s ultimate nightmare from being born.

Warning: This article contains spoilers for House of X #4!

STL129798

Major Mutant Deaths

The previous chapter of House of X introduced a critical new mission for the X-Men. Thanks to the events of her previous life cycle, Moira MacTaggert now knows when and where to act to ensure humanity never creates Nimrod, the ultimate mutant killer. She and Xavier charge Cyclops’ team with infiltrating Orchis’ orbital base on Sol’s Hammer, destroying the Mother Mold being constructed there and preventing Nimrod’s creation. Unfortunately, that proves far easier said than done.

Continue reading…

Philips 328E9FJAB Gaming Monitor Review

Philips has been making a big push into the gaming market lately, releasing a number of FreeSync gaming monitors this year—from the super-budget 326E to the costly, superwide, high-quality 499P9H. Its 328E line definitely leans more toward the former, providing solid picture quality at a wallet-friendly price. They lent me the 328E9FJAB (See it on Amazon) model to try out, which provides a massive 32-inch, 1440p display at 75Hz. Here’s how it performed.

Continue reading…

WRC 8 Launch Trailer Should Make Dirt Fans Happy

If you’ve been missing the fantastic Dirt racing series, then WRC 8 might fill the hole in your heart. The latest edition of BigBen’s off-road racer launches tomorrow, September 5, on Xbox One, PS4, and PC. A Nintendo Switch version will launch sometime in November.

Check out the launch trailer above ahead of tomorrow’s release, and if you need a bit more, click through the screenshots below (racing games always make for the prettiest screenshots).

Stay tuned for the IGN review of WRC 8 soon!

Ryan McCaffrey is IGN’s Executive Editor of Previews. Follow him on Twitter at @DMC_Ryan, catch him on Unlocked, and drop-ship him Taylor Ham sandwiches from New Jersey whenever possible.

Continue reading…

Asus ROG Phone 2 Hands On Impressions: The Ultimate Gaming Phone

I already thought the original ROG Phone was an amazing gaming smartphone, but this new ROG Phone 2 really ticks off all the boxes for the best mobile gaming device by being bigger and more powerful.

The first thing to note about the Asus ROG Phone 2 is it has a larger 6.59-inch display compared to the 6-inch screen of its predecessor. The new AMOLED screen has a slightly taller 19:9 aspect ratio that helps eliminate some of the original ROG Phone’s thick bezels.

While playing in portrait mode, the wider play space gave me all the room I needed for my thumbs to control the touchscreen without covering up the action I also needed to see. Ultrawide smartphones never made much sense to me for just watching movie trailers, but for gaming, it’s a godsend. I can control my character and see where enemies were at the same time in Mega Man DiVE.

Continue reading…

Hearthstone’s Next Single-Player Missions Are Heroic Class Mash-Ups

GameSpot may get a commission from retail offers.

Hearthstone has launched its Saviors of Uldum expansion, and issued a speedy balance patch, but its accompanying Solo Adventures content is still incoming. Blizzard has now announced a release date for the upcoming “Tombs of Terror” missions, along with lots of details about how this new set of missions is unlike any previous ones. The missions will begin on September 17.

As with the Dalaran Heist missions from Rise of Shadows, you’ll take on a series of encounters in the style of a dungeon run, building your deck and collecting powerful artifacts along the way. This time, though, you’ll be playing as the League of Explorers themselves, and each of them is a dual-class hero. The pairing of classes will open up new combo possibilities. Each hero will be tied to a particular chapter over the progressive release, and the heroes will be taking on “Plague Lord” bosses with huge health totals.

The first chapter will be free for all players, and then the subsequent three chapters will release weekly for $7 or 700 in-game gold. You can also purchase the Deluxe Bundle with all three chapters, which includes an exclusive card back and a random Saviors of Uldum Legendary card for use in the game’s traditional PvP modes.

  • Chapter 1: The Lost City of the Tol’Vir – Reno Jackson (Mage-Rogue) vs Plague Lord of Murlocs
  • Chapter 2: The Scorching Dunes – Sir Finley Mrrgglton (Paladin-Shaman) vs Plague Lord of Madness
  • Chapter 3: Khartut’s Tomb – Elise Starseeker (Druid-Priest) vs Plague Lord of Death
  • Chapter 4: The Halls of Origination – Brann Bronzebeard (Hunter-Warrior) vs Plague Lord of Wrath
  • Finale

Making your way through the content will earn you three Saviors of Uldum packs per chapter, plus a card back and Golden Classic pack for completing the story mode. Heroic difficulty will have its own card back as well.

This is the second of three expansions in a planned year-long story for Hearthstone. In the first story, the Arch-Thief Rafaam gathered a band of Hearthstone villains to pull off an ambitious heist: the entire city of Dalaran. This second chapter, Saviors of Uldum, sees the entrance of the League of Explorers to take on the villains.