![]() Outside of that, though, the final thing I found annoying with Cold War’s beta was how the lack of gun porn the game contained. For a game that’s presumably trying to be more realistic than its predecessor, this is something that often killed whatever immersion that I was able to find while playing, and it really needs to be tweaked prior to launch. Although you can’t quite double-jump or wallrun, you can slide ridiculous distances and jump insanely high over obstacles. The biggest one is that movement in the game is eerily similar to Black Ops 4’s exosuit combat. There are also some other small issues I found with the beta that made the experience not very fun. When combined with the game’s terrible time-to-kill, I was only able to play the game effectively if I constantly used the best gun in the game, which doesn’t exactly make for a fun afterwork activity. In the dozen-odd hours that I spent with the game, I almost exclusively got into games where I was able to dominate the entire enemy team or ones where I’d be lucky to get a few kills. The problem is that, at least in the beta, this system is entirely broken. Like in Modern Warfare before it, Cold War’s beta includes something akin to Rainbow 6: Siege’s ranked mode, where you’re supposed to only be put into matches with people that the game thinks have the same amount of skill as you. This is something that’s exacerbated by the infamous inclusion of skill-based matchmaking, too. The water map, called Armada, is one of the coolest I’ve ever played in a Call of Duty game. This is frustrating to say the least, as it all but forces you to use the handful of stupidly overpowered guns if you want to not get destroyed in literally every fight. Unless I was using one of the handful of overpowered guns, firefights would result in me and my enemy both shooting one another with a full magazine to drop both of our health bars down to nothing, then charging at one another with our pistols and rolling the dice to determine who would win the fight. Although I’m no stranger to long TTKs, as I’ve spent my fair share of time in Warzone and The Division, the beta’s simply feels terrible. However, for as great as these maps are and for as colourful as the game is, my overall experience in the beta was generally negative thanks to a number of changes to the tried-and-true Call of Duty formula, starting with the time-to-kill. This is presumably just a small glimpse at what’ll be in the full game, so it’ll be nice to play a Call of Duty game that launches with a full set of good maps for once. And finally, the one set in Moscow is ideal for every type of weapon and has some funny satire on Soviet culture. The Miami map, too, allows players to either sneak around the entire map or to simply charge head-on into a small urban environment. A large map set on a handful of large battleships offers numerous flanking routes (including ones that can only be accessed by swimming underwater) while also having places for snipers to camp. Visuals aside, they simply play better than most of the maps in previous Call of Duty titles. The beta offered about 10 maps across 20v20, 12v12 and 6v6 modes, and each one of them is honestly just great. It certainly helps that the maps themselves are fantastic to play on, too. The introduction sequences to missions are a nice touch I don’t doubt that the game will end up being as “serious” as last year’s Modern Warfare, but there are a lot less browns and melodramatic notes in this one, which is refreshing for a franchise that generally has less colour than a business suit store. Being set in what boils down to an ‘80s action movie means that the game absolutely oozes style, from its colourful maps to its actually fun soundtrack. Unlike with the more recent Call of Duty games, the beta throws you back to a time when disco was hip and communists were evil, and this setting is undoubtedly the game’s greatest strength. In this year’s entry, you take control of a spec ops soldier in a cold war gone warm in the 1980s. After playing this year’s Call of Duty Black Ops: Cold War beta, though, it looks like I’ll have to force myself to play it when it comes time to write a full review in a few weeks. It’s not exactly an obligation for me to play these games, but depending on the year, it can feel like one. ![]() It’s a set of filler games, something for me to play when I’m not playing better shooters or worse RPGs. Although the franchise has certainly had its ups and downs, each year I spend £45 on a series that I’ve come to think about in the same way I think about a beer that’s drunk in between cocktails. For as long as I can remember, I’ve been buying Call of Duty games at launch, and recently I’ve even started to participate in their testing phases.
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