Something went wrong. Try again later

Giant Bomb Review

272 Comments

Titanfall Review

4
  • XONE
  • PC

Titanfall's focus on player mobility and big-ass robots sets it apart from other competitive shooters and makes much of the game look like one big highlight reel.

Titanfall is a game for people who like competitive first-person shooters, but have gotten tired of seeing the same basic action year in and year out. If you already don't like (or have, at some point in the past, liked) games like Call of Duty, there's a very good chance that Titanfall will hold zero appeal for you. It is not here to save you, it is not rewriting the book on competitive action games, it will not wash your car, tuck you in at night, or fix you chicken soup if you get the flu. Titanfall doesn't have time for that nonsense; it's way too focused on being a great multiplayer shooter for people who already enjoy them. That leads to an interesting conundrum and a package that manages to be laser-focused on a specific type of gameplay, which can make it also feel a little too small. It all comes down to how much you already enjoy these games and how badly you want something that updates the Call of Duty formula in some new, exciting ways.

The AI-controlled grunts are really good at standing around and being ineffectual.
The AI-controlled grunts are really good at standing around and being ineffectual.

This game is "multiplayer-only," meaning you can't even get into the game's brief training mode without first connecting to an online server. It has a campaign mode, but this is really just a set of standard multiplayer matches with some assorted story-focused dialogue layered over the action, like someone decided to put on a radio play while you shoot at people. It doesn't have very many modes to its competitive multiplayer either--there are five, to be exact, and two of them are identical in basic gameplay but slightly different in the way points are scored. By having equivalents to Call of Duty's Team Deathmatch and Domination modes, Titanfall checks the most popular boxes, but when you compare it to the three-games-in-one-for-the-same-price approach of Call of Duty, Titanfall feels small. This is probably the point where I should remind you that both games launched at full price.

That all sounds pretty damning, and if you're a value-minded consumer who wants tons of variety out of a game, Titanfall is a tough sell. But behind the short list of modes and no-stakes storytelling lies some extremely satisfying and fluid gameplay. Titanfall looks slim on paper, but in practice it's positively explosive for a couple of different reasons. First, you have more mobility as a player. The soldiers in Titanfall can double jump and run along walls, and you can combine those moves again and again to get up onto rooftops and climb high walls. The verticality of the action means that there could be an enemy pilot hiding just about anywhere, and you're forced to adapt and start looking around everywhere, instead of just keeping your eyes focused at ground level and the obvious perches that make up most shooter maps these days. Moving around in Titanfall is rewarding and fun, at times feeling like you're playing a light version of Mirror's Edge, but never so much that it forgets that your primary mission is to shoot people.

Wall-running and a big robot. This image sums up Titanfall's unique features pretty perfectly.
Wall-running and a big robot. This image sums up Titanfall's unique features pretty perfectly.

The movement creates amazing scenarios that you want to tell people about, like the time you ran along a wall to clamber up to a rooftop only to leap off of that roof into a window across the street, where you caught some unsuspecting fool slipping and kicked him in his stupid face... and then you just kept running, trying to do it all again. Or the time you hauled ass around the outer edge of the map, shot every single AI soldier you saw, snapped a couple of necks, captured a control point, and immediately made a giant robot drop out of the sky. Camping out on a roof or in a window is certainly possible in Titanfall, and the game has sniper rifles in an attempt to support this type of gameplay, but players move so quickly and erratically that snipers feel like they're at a real disadvantage... which further incites more players to run around like maniacs at all times. In 20 or so hours with the game I've had a sizable list of great-looking moments where the mobility and shooting collide in a way that makes you feel unstoppable. It's a game that feels like it was built for highlight reels.

The other big differentiators are the titans themselves. These big robot suits drop from the sky in impressive fashion when pilots call them in, and they let you stomp and dash around levels with some amount of authority. But they aren't invincible. The shields on a titan recharge, Halo-style, but the underlying armor does not. This, along with lengthy weapon reload animations, incentivize you to occasionally back off and recharge. The titans are actually somewhat fragile, so you don't necessarily need to fight titans with titans, as every player has a dedicated slot for anti-titan weapons that can do serious damage. The interplay between players on foot and players in their robots is great, with pilots attempting to poke out, paint a titan long enough to lock-on, and fire big missiles before getting noticed, gunned-down, stomped, or punched apart by a giant robot fist. That said, I found titan-on-titan conflicts to be somewhat monotonous and occasionally even sluggish, since it's the only time the game asks you to hang back and prepare instead of going full-bore at the competition. But hey, let the titans blow up... you can always get another one.

You can enter your titan from any angle, resulting in a handful of nice boarding animations.
You can enter your titan from any angle, resulting in a handful of nice boarding animations.

Titan deployment is governed by a timer. That timer ticks down naturally, but you can also reduce the required time by shooting enemies. Killing players and shooting at titans take significant chunks off your clock, but the maps are also peppered with AI foes who aren't smart or strong enough to kill you unless you're extremely careless. They keep you on your toes and, yes, killing them also takes time off your titan clock, giving you a decent incentive to farm those AI enemies as you run from place to place. You might think of it as the Call of Duty killstreak system, but instead of only rewarding players who play well, it rewards everyone--but players who shoot well are rewarded much more frequently.

Like just about every other modern shooter, Titanfall has you earning experience points, gaining levels, and unlocking different customization options. You'll quickly gain the ability to create custom loadouts for both your pilot and your titan, and each has its own set of weapons and perks. As is my custom, I settled on fully automatic assault rifles as the main weapon for both my pilot and titan. The game has a short list of other weapons, but range-reduced sub-machine guns and shotguns feel too limited when faced with the larger-than-average map sizes. For players who especially like getting behind enemies or can't aim, the one unique option for primary pilot weapons is a smart pistol that behaves like lock-on targeting in a Panzer Dragoon game. AI-powered fodder goes down in one lock-on hit, but human pilots won't drop unless you lock onto them with three separate shots. Is it unbalanced? A baby gun for babies? I'm no balance designer, but the smart pistol doesn't feel all that powerful. Locking on three times takes longer than it would take to just aim at and shoot an enemy with any other weapon, and If you stand around long enough to get locked onto three times, you probably deserve to get gunned down.

The auto-eject perk lets you launch out of your titan before it blows up, taking you with it.
The auto-eject perk lets you launch out of your titan before it blows up, taking you with it.

Titans have more options in addition to basic full-auto and semi-auto rifles, like a quad rocket launcher, a railgun, a charged energy bolt, and a grenade launcher that fires three grenades at once. The titan loadouts seem more interesting than the pilot weapons because they can help you play slightly different roles. The assault rifle and lighter weapons are fast-firing and handy against pesky pilots and still useful in titan-on-titan skirmishes. The heavier weapons, as you might expect, take a little longer to get going, but they're much more devastating to a titan's armor. Overall, most of the weapon options feel a little staid. You might expect a world that allows humans to warp to faraway planets and call in robots from space to offer up slightly edgier weapons than SMGs and sniper rifles.

The online-only nature of Titanfall means that it's only as good as its server infrastructure. In pre-release testing, I ran into a few cases where the latency would spike, causing AI opposition to seize up and enemy titans to halt, mid-dash. On launch day, the game ran into some bumps, occasionally dropping players from games or lobbies, making it difficult to get into a game at times. This seems like it was mostly smoothed over by the end of its first 24 hours on sale, and the network responsiveness has been solid, with none of the lag spikes or other issues I saw prior to the game's launch. It's a little disappointing that the game doesn't have an option for private matches or any sort of LAN support, but what's on display seems to work well.

The titans can dash out of the way of some missiles.
The titans can dash out of the way of some missiles.

The frame rate in Titanfall is uneven on the Xbox One and though it's usually fine, it can get downright nasty in specific situations. In one Last Titan Standing match--where every player spawns in a robot suit--several players crammed their mechs into a tight area and began duking it out, and the frame rate dived down to what must have been single digits per second. Even out in wider areas, the game feels a little hitchy from time to time, and there's noticeable tearing throughout. The visuals in Titanfall look nice, but that's mostly due to some solid art and interesting design, not the performance. On the PC, the game scales to fit a lot of different configurations, so you can essentially buy your way out of the console version's performance issues. On a proper machine, the textures look great and the smooth frame rate really goes a long way.

I'll say it again, since we should probably wrap this up: Titanfall is a very specific game built for a specific type of person. When you add it all up, the list of available content and the various options for speccing out your pilot feel light, and that might make this game a little hard to swallow at $60. But getting into these wild situations and shooting your way out of them feels fresh and fun in a way that the other shooters on the market don't. If you like the basic form but need more of a twist on how you move and how you shoot, Titanfall's core action is extremely satisfying, which makes it a little easier to overlook the lack of available modes.

Editor's note 03/13/2014: Due to this game's online-only requirement, this review originally went up without a score on it. This was done to afford us the time to gauge how it performs in a real, retail environment. When converting this into a scored review, text discussing the online portion of the game was updated to reflect the game's post-launch performance. Text discussing the specifics of the PC version's visuals was also added.

Jeff Gerstmann on Google+

272 Comments

Avatar image for edfromred
EDfromRED

137

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

I hope the GOTYE and/or sequel comes to the PS4. I'm not spending $500+ for one game.

Avatar image for solh0und
Solh0und

2189

Forum Posts

10

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Solh0und

Two weeks until I can play the "low res" 360 version. Woo!

Avatar image for hassun
hassun

10300

Forum Posts

191

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

@jeff Heh, I see the extra training mode reference is gone.

Thanks for the rewrite, good review.

Avatar image for meatball
MEATBALL

4235

Forum Posts

790

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 10

Edited By MEATBALL

No LAN support in 2014 is at least understandable, but no private match options? That seems kind of insane.

Also, I guess it's information that's relatively easy to find, but I'm surprised there's no mention of the amount of maps in the game (I don't know how many there are, I'd hope it's a significant number).

Avatar image for iluvmsmarvel
ILuvMsMarvel

143

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Every time I see the image of the wall runner and titan I think of how much it looks like a scene out of Attack on Titan.

Avatar image for quadracer131
quadracer131

44

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 2

Playing this on PC currently, and its fun. Thats it I guess, not the NEXT GENERATION OF GAMING some thought it would be. Its a better Brink, and thats awesome.

I liked Brink.

Avatar image for psylah
psylah

2362

Forum Posts

100

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

THIS IS AN OUTRAGE.

Avatar image for vuud
Vuud

2052

Forum Posts

74

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Vuud

Sounds like it's not the killer-app some were hoping for XBONE.

I'mma go play HAWKEN.

Avatar image for dukest3
DukesT3

2114

Forum Posts

773

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

I want to shoot dudes in the face and this game seems great, only that I'd rather do it with a PC... Sorry Xbox One.. maybe later this year? I'll buy you eventually I promise!

Avatar image for jblp
jblp

154

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

@vuud said:

Sounds like it's not the killer-app some were hoping for XBONE.

I'mma go play HAWKEN.

I'm betting Microsoft disagrees. You realize that's a good review, right?

Anywho, I haven't played an online shooter since (5 years ago?) I played some TF2 and before that I think (10+ years ago?) Conterstrike and Q3, and I'm having such a good time with Titanfall. I don't "feel" like a specific type of person.

Avatar image for smellylettuce
smellylettuce

294

Forum Posts

17

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Edited By smellylettuce

It's definitely growing on me if only for some of the crazy things you end up pulling off. It's difficult to do, but I think they've managed to make a competitive shooter into a power fantasy as well. The hours are just flying by now.

Avatar image for sfighter21
sfighter21

870

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

I feel like I'm the only person not interested in this game.

You aren't. They can dress it up, but an FPS is still an FPS...

Avatar image for monkeypunch
MonkeyPunch

26

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Very succinct Mr. Gerstmann and pretty much exactly how I feel about the game.

I will sit there thinking "this isn't really that extraordinary" then I will catch myself smiling at certain in-game situations just because of how "cool" they looked and felt.

Avatar image for humanity
Humanity

21858

Forum Posts

5738

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 40

User Lists: 16

@bisonhero: I think common sense should be appreciated but not applauded.

Avatar image for willylo
willylo

331

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

Great review! I'd agree 100% especially it being light on the unlockables, I'm already finding myself a little less enamored with the game now that I've unlocked pretty much everything. It's still fun to jump in and play a match or two but I don't think I'll be playing this as much as I initially thought.

Hopefully Dark Souls 2 and Infamous Second Son will fill in the gaps, in my gaming time, that are open now.

Avatar image for sawtooth
sawtooth

700

Forum Posts

2465

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 4

User Lists: 0

Still not sold on this game. It's weird, I remember if I got into a game of CS or TF2 with bots, it was reason to drop out of the match, whereas this game forces bots into every match, and also seems to revel in giving them terrible AI.

Avatar image for ptc
ptc

640

Forum Posts

106

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

"If you already don't like (or have, at some point in the past, liked) games like Call of Duty, there's a very good chance that Titanfall will hold zero appeal for you."

I have to disagree with Jeff on this one. I don't like Call of Duty, but I've really been enjoying Titanfall. It is FUN. I actually think it was specifically designed to appeal to those who like Call of Duty type FPSs while at the same time appealing to the more casual gamer who can take or leave an FPS. Respawn managed to nail that cross-over appeal. I'm not describing this too well. If interested, check out Tina Amini's review over on Kataku. She does a much better job of describing why it appeals to me, and why it might appeal to you if you're still on the fence.

Avatar image for iceveiled
iceveiled

47

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Huh. Glad I restrained myself. Sounds like the few hours I spent with the beta was enough time to basically get my Titanfall fix. I'd like to say I'll buy it when it's $30, but by then the only people still playing on PC will be hackers/cheaters and no-lifers who have been playing nonstop 24/7.

Still curious to see what they do for a sequel. It seems like they left out a lot of customization options on purpose so they don't have to spend as much time brainstorming ideas for the sequel. Doesn't seem like $60 worth of game in there..

Avatar image for snakepond
Snakepond

101

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

I am really having a hard time with the user comments of this review and the user comments on Jeff's review of infamous. They both get a 4 star and Jeff enjoyed both of them. Yet, the user comments are very different. Titanfalls user comments are negative and happy Jeff did not give it a 5 star and infamous user comments where positive because Jeff gave it a 4 star. What's the deal?

Avatar image for yeliwofthecorn
yeliwofthecorn

106

Forum Posts

1

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Huh. I just saw an ad for Titanfall featuring a quote from "Giantbomb" that said "Titanfall looks straight up incredible." I didn't think Jeff ever used that phrase in his review, so I decided to doublecheck. Sure enough, wherever they pulled that quote from is not this review.

I wonder if that's even an actual quote.

Avatar image for lapsariangiraff
lapsariangiraff

594

Forum Posts

629

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 3

@yeliwofthecorn:

It's a quote from a title Patrick gave one of the first Titanfall trailers posted on Giant Bomb. The title is: "Yeah, Titanfall looks straight up incredible."