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Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction on Xbox (2005)

Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction cover art

Average rating: 71%
222671817181220
3.5 stars out of 5
from 238 members
 
Certificate: Certificate: TBC
Format: Xbox
Released: 18/02/2005
Also Available on:  Also Available on: PS2

Brief synopsis of Mercenaries: Playground of Destruction

Ahhh. Death, destruction and extreme violence: how better than to spend a cold winter's evening. In fact, it's a great way to spend any evening. Blowing stuff up generally appeals to our inner warrior, and the more spectacular the explosion, the more compelling this psychopathic indulgence becomes. Hence, Pandemic's latest blow 'em up, Mercenaries, has us cackling incessantly in a blood-curdlingly menacing fashion. It's a free-roaming stomp around a pseudo-fictional Korean war zone and it boasts a propensity for violence even greater than those kids who hang around launching fireworks at stray cats. As much as Mercenaries is its own game, if you were to envisage a cross between GTA, Hitman and an actual war, you'd be picturing a similar sort of thing. However, it is more than just a mosaic of proven successes and the idea as a whole does actually feel like something new and innovative. After a seemingly endless procession of sequel releases and shamelessly plagiarised concepts, that is a truly satisfying thing. Although the content of the game itself isn't revolutionary, the richness and immersiveness of the tense atmosphere marks this down as something quite special. All-in-all, we?re extremely impressed with Mercenaries. The graphics are excellent, and although there is a lot of fog and smoke, it can certainly be construed as atmospheric in this particular instance. Technically, it?s comfortably ensconced on the top tier of Xbox releases. At its core, the action is relentless, and thanks to the sheer scale and ferocity of the continuous explosions, it?s all extremely satisfying for those with a penchant for large-scale destruction. All this is packed into a chaotic, destructible world that is fundamentally fear-inducing; and that works for us? on many levels.

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Rated - 2 starsA potentially unfair review

Owen Dowling from London , 04/07/2006

A videogame that promises you can blow stuff up, then blow it up again, etc., sounds great. But when you feel like you're wondering around a sub GTA clone thinly camouflaged in military fatigues, the greatness is hard to find. This will get a sequel, and hopefully as much attention will be given to the gameplay as to the genuinely lively sandpit in which it faffs about.

But I may be unfair, it's your call

  1 out of 1 person found this review helpful

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