Something went wrong. Try again later

Giant Bomb News

26 Comments

Hands-On: Far Cry 2 Multiplayer

Multiplayer gets mercenary in this look at the online modes in Ubi Montreal's upcoming open-world shooter.

You've heard plenty by now about what's unique in Far Cry 2: its open-world gameplay set in a massive section of the African savanna; its dynamic social hierarchy of warring mercenary factions allying and reorganizing themselves based on who you befriend and who you kill; its advanced physics and weather systems that allow you to destroy small buildings, watch the resulting fire spread across the dry plain grass, then see a storm come in and quash the flames. The game's campaign is seriously ambitious, but if Ubisoft Montreal can pull it all off, I'm expecting it to be something special.

Mmm, explosions.
Mmm, explosions.
Far Cry 2 also has a multiplayer mode which utilizes the technical aspects of the single-player but not the campaign-specific gameplay mechanics. The online action here is more traditional map-by-map, class-based action, somewhere between Call of Duty 4 and Battlefield. I got to try out all the game's online modes at an Ubi event in San Francisco, and found the gameplay sticks close to what you've come to expect in those sorts of games. Though since you're playing as a bunch of mercenaries, the action and equipment have a slightly dirtier, seat-of-the-pants feel to them.

There are three modes in Far Cry 2 multiplayer: Deathmatch (in delicious flavors like team and free-for-all), Capture the Diamond, and Uprising. If you've ever even caught a whiff of a multiplayer shooter before, Uprising is the only one of those I'll need to explain. It sticks you in a map with three control points and randomly nominates one player on each team as the commander. That guy's the only one who can capture each of the points, by hanging around them for 20 seconds each. Once you've got all three points, your team has to take out the other commander to win. But, of course, he can keep retaking the points you've already gotten if he's crafty enough. The match I played ended up in a back-and-forth stalemate until time ran out, so you'll need real team coordination to hold all your captured points and kill the opposing team's leader.

Hey, I didn't get to do any hang gliding!
Hey, I didn't get to do any hang gliding!
Your choice of class only seems to determine your weapon loadout. The six classes are guerrilla, gunner, commando, sharpshooter, rebel, and saboteur, and each one of them has a specific focus. The sharpshooter starts with a sniper rifle. The guerrilla has a combat shotgun, Molotov cocktail, and other close-quarters attacks. The rebel uses a flamethrower, while the gunner carries a heavy machine gun. All of the classes seem to control basically the same; the game has a more slowly paced, deliberate feel than what you'd be used to from Call of Duty. It's probably closer to Halo in terms of basic movement and so on.

That would be a decent amount of variety already, but in this post-Call of Duty 4 world, you can't really make a multiplayer shooter without some kind of character-progression system, so each of these classes can be upgraded up to three times. You earn experience points mid-match by pulling off specific tasks, like flag captures or kill streaks, and those points translate into diamonds. You can then cash in a diamond to raise one of the classes up one level, which will unlock alternate primary and secondary weapons and things like that. In ranked matches, you'll have a persistent account where your classes' upgrade levels are carried from one game to the next, and the experience-point curve for gaining diamonds here will be steep. But in one-off custom matches, you'll be able to earn diamonds fast enough to upgrade multiple classes in one match or one session. The catch, of course, is that you lose that experience when you exit.

BIG HONKING ROCKET LAUNCHER.
BIG HONKING ROCKET LAUNCHER.
Some of the unique things from the campaign do show up in the multiplayer. I torched a grassy area with the flamethrower and then had to high-tail it out of there as the whole area was soon ablaze. A good number of simple structures (shacks and such) seemed nice and destructible (they done blowed up good, is what I am saying). Anything sturdier appeared to be static geometry, though, based on the effects of the exploratory grenades I chucked around. There's a full day/night cycle in here that visibly progresses as you play. One map started at dusk, and I had to admire the sunset over the mountains before getting shot in the back of the head by someone who was probably thinking, What is that idiot doing just standing there? Interestingly, since you're mercenaries, there's no fancy equipment like nightvision to aid you when it gets dark, so it can get pretty tough to see your enemies once the sun is down. At least, that was the case on the LCDs at the event, which had pretty shallow contrast, as LCDs tend to have.

Far Cry 2 ships with 14 maps, a respectable number by any measure. But there's also a full level editor in here, which sounds fairly robust: it has internal checks as you're editing that give you an idea of what the frame rate and performance will be like in real-world conditions. Expect a community rating system to (hopefully) float the best of the best to the top of the heap.

The ambitious campaign mode is by far still the main attraction to me in Far Cry 2. Ubi may be talking a big game with the feature set there, but it sure does sound good (and original) on paper. The multiplayer modes stick much closer to established multiplayer-shooter formula. But they seem like they could be a pretty good way to squeeze some extra life out of this game once you've wrung all you can out of the campaign, which itself seems like it could be worth running through two or three times.

I permit you to check out all the new multiplayer screenshots that Ubi released today, and Gamershell also has a whopping five new trailers of the game to keep your Far Cry lust sated.
Brad Shoemaker on Google+

26 Comments

Avatar image for brad
Brad

6955

Forum Posts

9601

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By Brad

You've heard plenty by now about what's unique in Far Cry 2: its open-world gameplay set in a massive section of the African savanna; its dynamic social hierarchy of warring mercenary factions allying and reorganizing themselves based on who you befriend and who you kill; its advanced physics and weather systems that allow you to destroy small buildings, watch the resulting fire spread across the dry plain grass, then see a storm come in and quash the flames. The game's campaign is seriously ambitious, but if Ubisoft Montreal can pull it all off, I'm expecting it to be something special.

Mmm, explosions.
Mmm, explosions.
Far Cry 2 also has a multiplayer mode which utilizes the technical aspects of the single-player but not the campaign-specific gameplay mechanics. The online action here is more traditional map-by-map, class-based action, somewhere between Call of Duty 4 and Battlefield. I got to try out all the game's online modes at an Ubi event in San Francisco, and found the gameplay sticks close to what you've come to expect in those sorts of games. Though since you're playing as a bunch of mercenaries, the action and equipment have a slightly dirtier, seat-of-the-pants feel to them.

There are three modes in Far Cry 2 multiplayer: Deathmatch (in delicious flavors like team and free-for-all), Capture the Diamond, and Uprising. If you've ever even caught a whiff of a multiplayer shooter before, Uprising is the only one of those I'll need to explain. It sticks you in a map with three control points and randomly nominates one player on each team as the commander. That guy's the only one who can capture each of the points, by hanging around them for 20 seconds each. Once you've got all three points, your team has to take out the other commander to win. But, of course, he can keep retaking the points you've already gotten if he's crafty enough. The match I played ended up in a back-and-forth stalemate until time ran out, so you'll need real team coordination to hold all your captured points and kill the opposing team's leader.

Hey, I didn't get to do any hang gliding!
Hey, I didn't get to do any hang gliding!
Your choice of class only seems to determine your weapon loadout. The six classes are guerrilla, gunner, commando, sharpshooter, rebel, and saboteur, and each one of them has a specific focus. The sharpshooter starts with a sniper rifle. The guerrilla has a combat shotgun, Molotov cocktail, and other close-quarters attacks. The rebel uses a flamethrower, while the gunner carries a heavy machine gun. All of the classes seem to control basically the same; the game has a more slowly paced, deliberate feel than what you'd be used to from Call of Duty. It's probably closer to Halo in terms of basic movement and so on.

That would be a decent amount of variety already, but in this post-Call of Duty 4 world, you can't really make a multiplayer shooter without some kind of character-progression system, so each of these classes can be upgraded up to three times. You earn experience points mid-match by pulling off specific tasks, like flag captures or kill streaks, and those points translate into diamonds. You can then cash in a diamond to raise one of the classes up one level, which will unlock alternate primary and secondary weapons and things like that. In ranked matches, you'll have a persistent account where your classes' upgrade levels are carried from one game to the next, and the experience-point curve for gaining diamonds here will be steep. But in one-off custom matches, you'll be able to earn diamonds fast enough to upgrade multiple classes in one match or one session. The catch, of course, is that you lose that experience when you exit.

BIG HONKING ROCKET LAUNCHER.
BIG HONKING ROCKET LAUNCHER.
Some of the unique things from the campaign do show up in the multiplayer. I torched a grassy area with the flamethrower and then had to high-tail it out of there as the whole area was soon ablaze. A good number of simple structures (shacks and such) seemed nice and destructible (they done blowed up good, is what I am saying). Anything sturdier appeared to be static geometry, though, based on the effects of the exploratory grenades I chucked around. There's a full day/night cycle in here that visibly progresses as you play. One map started at dusk, and I had to admire the sunset over the mountains before getting shot in the back of the head by someone who was probably thinking, What is that idiot doing just standing there? Interestingly, since you're mercenaries, there's no fancy equipment like nightvision to aid you when it gets dark, so it can get pretty tough to see your enemies once the sun is down. At least, that was the case on the LCDs at the event, which had pretty shallow contrast, as LCDs tend to have.

Far Cry 2 ships with 14 maps, a respectable number by any measure. But there's also a full level editor in here, which sounds fairly robust: it has internal checks as you're editing that give you an idea of what the frame rate and performance will be like in real-world conditions. Expect a community rating system to (hopefully) float the best of the best to the top of the heap.

The ambitious campaign mode is by far still the main attraction to me in Far Cry 2. Ubi may be talking a big game with the feature set there, but it sure does sound good (and original) on paper. The multiplayer modes stick much closer to established multiplayer-shooter formula. But they seem like they could be a pretty good way to squeeze some extra life out of this game once you've wrung all you can out of the campaign, which itself seems like it could be worth running through two or three times.

I permit you to check out all the new multiplayer screenshots that Ubi released today, and Gamershell also has a whopping five new trailers of the game to keep your Far Cry lust sated.
Avatar image for broqz
broqz

135

Forum Posts

6

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By broqz

looks good.

Avatar image for ninjapaul
NinjaPaul

46

Forum Posts

15

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By NinjaPaul

cant wait for this game. 14 maps sounds like a fair amount as well.

Avatar image for synazrael
synazrael

44

Forum Posts

20

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By synazrael

I really want to try this game out.  But I've been let down by ambitious games in the past.  Multiplayer sounds oddly tame though, as compared to what they've been saying about the single player campaign.

Avatar image for media_master
Media_Master

3259

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Media_Master

Awesome multi player!

Avatar image for digital_sin
digital_sin

1896

Forum Posts

5480

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 3

Edited By digital_sin

I really don't care for multiplayer in Far Cry, I just want a decent  single player campaign.

Avatar image for randombullet
RandomBullet

58

Forum Posts

12

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 2

Edited By RandomBullet

This is gonna be a great game. Lots of replay value with over 50 hours of gameplay. Hope they release some dlc maps for multiplayer after a while. Definitely a day-one buy.

Avatar image for john
John

847

Forum Posts

427

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 1

Edited By John

Multiplayer graphics looks surprisingly great. Normally Ubi puts the eye candy only in the single player. Btw, Brad got a ton of Wiki points for the Far Cry 2 images Ubi gave him. heh.

Avatar image for j_meyer_13
j_meyer_13

414

Forum Posts

11

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 6

Edited By j_meyer_13

Man, I want this game.  The single player sounds godly, if they pull it off, and multiplayer sounds pretty good, albeit a bit sparse on variety.  Map Editor should be really good tho, so that'll keep it interesting for a while hopefully.

Avatar image for dryker
Dryker

1234

Forum Posts

64

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 0

Edited By Dryker

I'm covering my ears, lalalalalalalalalal! Way too many games to buy this holiday.

Avatar image for arbitrarywater
ArbitraryWater

16104

Forum Posts

5585

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 8

User Lists: 66

Edited By ArbitraryWater

Maybe? I will have to see other people's impressions and reviews before I buy this.

Avatar image for hexogen
hexogen

802

Forum Posts

3477

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 7

Edited By hexogen

The single player is still what interests me the most about this game, but I'm glad to hear the multiplayer is pretty good as well.

Avatar image for claude
Claude

16672

Forum Posts

1047

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 18

Edited By Claude

What Dryker said.

Avatar image for mrklorox
MrKlorox

11220

Forum Posts

1071

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By MrKlorox

This is one of the great games for which I'm finally replacing my relic with a proper PC gaming rig. Super excited.

Avatar image for coakroach
coakroach

2499

Forum Posts

27

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By coakroach

lol at the redneck talk Brad ;)
Games looking pretty solid, Fallout 3 is top of my list at the moment though

Avatar image for jamesk
JamesK

88

Forum Posts

845

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 4

Edited By JamesK

Looking forward to this one.

Avatar image for jordan23
Jordan23

1097

Forum Posts

35

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 1

Edited By Jordan23
Far Cry 2 sounds very excited, this perhaps, maybe the FPS of the year, (it's so overlooked).
Avatar image for selfdestroyer
selfdestroyer

34

Forum Posts

1

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By selfdestroyer

I'll be checking this out.. Look perty

Avatar image for giyanks22
giyanks22

2950

Forum Posts

816

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 17

User Lists: 5

Edited By giyanks22

looks awesome

Avatar image for morningthief
morningthief

83

Forum Posts

3

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By morningthief

Brad, don't you ever rest?

Avatar image for rhcpfan24
RHCPfan24

8663

Forum Posts

22301

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 16

User Lists: 8

Edited By RHCPfan24

looks awesome

Avatar image for pfighter
PFighter

47

Forum Posts

41

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 1

Edited By PFighter

out of all the games coming out this year, im most excited for this

Avatar image for zoozilla
zoozilla

1025

Forum Posts

25

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 2

User Lists: 4

Edited By zoozilla
"they done blowed up good, is what I am saying"

Now that's what I like to hear.
Avatar image for aaox
aaox

1674

Forum Posts

5623

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 5

Edited By aaox

I wish I could have a BIG HONKING ROCKET LAUNCHER for christmas.

Avatar image for smersh
Smersh

224

Forum Posts

452

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 4

Edited By Smersh

Far Cry - Crytek = The Heartless Cash Cow.

Avatar image for pico
Pico

5

Forum Posts

43

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

Edited By Pico

I've got high hopes for this game. It just might offer better multiplayer than Resistance 2 and Gears...