I am what the Internet may deem a “Mass Effect fanboy. I’ve played the first two more times than any
person should, I have strong opinions on the series’ lore and characters and I’ve
even given brief thoughts about reading the tie-in comic books. Therefore, it
wouldn’t be too out of place to assume that the release of Mass Effect 3 would be one of the more iconic rays of light in the
tedious mire of the first twenty-year slog of my existence.
Although it hails from the mutant-baby graduating class of
2007, BioWare’s Mass Effect was an
exemplar of the company’s creative origins and showing the potential of the
epic adventures that the Western RPG genre has so skillfully provided since its
nativity in the pen-and-paper days. While the game’s presentation rendered both
RPG and shooter fans somewhat lukewarm for the haphazard mixing of the
respective genres' individual elements; the core mechanic of trekking across a
galaxy of limitless potential and unparalleled danger with nothing to count on
but the loyalty of a group of misfits and hard-asses was enough to make the
dreams of a thoughtful stargazer or hardcore science fiction fan sink their
teeth into what being part of galactic civilization might actually feel like
someday.
While I’ve heard many shooter fans criticize Mass Effect for its slow, clunky
movements, dodgy cover mechanics and Shepard’s infamous “crab-walk” when
crouching coupled with core combat relying on thoughtful uses of biotic and
tech powers rather than baser gunplay; I always found that once the surface was
scratched, Mass Effect provided a
very compelling and deep action RPG experience. It’s always nice to see a
situation where the outcome of a firefight can be decided beyond the means of
who saw who first, or who was smart enough to bring an assault rifle instead of
relying on the pretention of having skill. The original Mass Effect implemented powers to disable enemies’ weapons or
biotics, throw the crates they used for cover across the room with telekinesis,
and distinguishing NPCs as organics and synthetics to ensure that the player
was encouraged to round out their team so they never painted themselves into a
corner.
However, Mass Effect 2 postulated that the level of depth its predecessor provided was a bit too
obscure or overlooked that it decided upon tightening the cover-based shooting
mechanics to ensnare a bigger audience for its face value. In theory this is a
clever and practical skill to make sure players don’t get turned off from your
game before the developers get a chance to show off some of the more artful and
skillful applications of the combat-biotic-tech trifecta iconic to the series. Mass Effect 2 however, doesn’t succeed
in doing this, and any and every situation can be handled in the same manner,
by any class and with any combination of squadmates. This perpetuates the trend
in many modern games where you *can* ploy different tactics, but why would you
want to when the direct method is faster and just as, or more effective?
The reason I’ve provided a somewhat spartan rundown of the
first two games before talking about the one I’m actually reviewing, is because
after the dizzy meandering the series has gone through in the gameplay
department, Mass Effect 3 has finally
done what the series has been trying to since the beginning.
I respect BioWare’s move to take mechanics from Gears of War and build their own game
from the rudimentary experience that Epic Games provided. While Gears receives more than its fair share
of flak for being one of the flagship grey-brown shooters of our day; gameplay
wise, it epitomizes its genre. Therefore, Mass
Effect 3 enjoys tight cover mechanics and exciting firefights. Many critics
would certainly say that because of this, Mass
Effect 3 has conformed to the standards of the modern day and that BioWare
has "sold out;" but by working the cover mechanics into the action-RPG style
strategy necessary for survival, a satisfyingly rich experience awaits anyone willing to give it a chance. While you can simply fire across a “no-man’s
land” against other gun-toting troops; the game offers a damage bonus to
weapons in close-quarters, NPCs employ a number of techniques to flush the
player from cover and shields will only recharge efficiently when the player is
completely safe from attacks. Due to this, combat can be exciting and hectic,
and the player must always be attentive and keep moving in order to avoid a faceful of space-bullets.
What Gears of War
doesn’t have, however, is the ability to modify and personalize an array of weapons. The earlier
games also included this feature, but ME3 managed to combine the sheer variety
of combinations and tactics that Mass
Effect provided with its weapon modification system, with the streamlined
design philosophy ME2 proposed. Instead of navigating a tedious interface after
every hour and a half in gameplay or combing the galaxy for every crumb of platinum; players simply buy new weapons, mods or armor pieces and merely
upgrade the ones they prefer. These amenities can also be found in missions,
thereby creating a rudimentary exploration element to the game. This upgrade
system feels much more organic as time passes due to equipment being available through
spending in-game credits earned through missions or side-quests; thus, removing
the laborious grinding and in turn, making the Reaper threat feel more urgent.
The inclusion of biotics
and tech attacks add much more flavour to the Mass Effect universe, but also create a phenomenon I’ve never
experienced in another game. After the rigmarole of running, gunning and doing
the Pokemon/Fire Emblem thing where you use the right power to strip the right
form of protection, I started to actually read
my talent tree nodes and the choices offered when certain powers branches off.
This cultivated a scenario where I would try to invent new combos to compete
with the speed and efficiency of merely sniping enemies silly. For example, I played
as an infiltrator, and enjoyed cycling through a number of different
strategies. My favorite tactics were using cryo attacks to snap-freeze foes
before launching incinerate to create a large explosion of razor-sharp ice
shards, and employing my tactical cloak with a specially-crafted pistol to ambush confused enemies with a barrage of melee strikes.
One thing I can say about the gameplay is that due to the
sheer number of abilities that are available to the player at any given time
can mean that many will probably go unused. I would blindly invest talent points into powers
that would gather dust in the radial menu because only three powers can be
mapped to the Xbox 360 controller at a time. Squadmates are given a single mapped power
with the left and right buttons on the D-pad. However, because the D-pad is a
little awkward to use in high-action gameplay, moments where it would become
necessary to use my cleverly planned strategies would never be executed as
elegantly as envisioned. Radial menus have always been accompanied with a
merciful pause in gameplay in most instances they are used; but in a piece that relies on fast-paced shooting, it means that the flow suffers significantly. Therefore, it is oftentimes better to simply
let your squadmates manage their own abilities.
So yes, Mass Effect 3’s gameplay only really shines when reflected on Shepard. The only time you will notice any difficulty curve, the value of a tactical approach to combat and the wide selection of weapons and mods will be on the player character. This was cemented when I was five or six smoothly executed missions in before I finally noticed that I could actually manage my squadmates’ gear. After that I tried to be clever by providing my team with uniquely augmented weapons for handling specific situations, but I’d often get lost in my own experiments on the battlefield to even remember my minions carried guns in the first place.
The review has focused heavily on gameplay because there isn’t much to
say in the story department. A BioWare game is predictable as the tides; the
narrative will always be creative, the characters will be interesting and
well-rounded and you can be certain that there will be equal amounts of
laughter and tears. Say what you will about any hated BioWare game of your
choice, but narrative is something they have done consistently well since the
very beginning. Mass Effect 3 is no
different, and even scores extra points in the emotion department for having
built off the relationships and story elements from the previous two games. Hell,
for the first three quarters of the game, ME3 is the perfect Mass Effect experience; it really feels
like the game the team wanted to provide from the start.
And then...
And then...
The last stretch of the game is retarded. I’m sorry, but
when placed against the brilliance the game opened with, I cannot feign any
sort of amiability to the inclusion of Kai Leng, the subplot about Miranda’s
father and of course, the ending.
I haven’t read whatever Kai Leng was introduced in, but I
feel that many Mass Effect fans
will support his presence in ME3 due to him technically being a pre-existing
character. Cerberus’ role in the series was quite interesting- a
good example of how the effects of Reaper indoctrination can manifest in different
ways, in this case, The Illusive Man's delusions that he could control the Reapers like he controls his nefarious business. But Kai doesn’t really have anything to *do* with this bottom line, and radiates a sort of Shepard 2.0 vibe. He isn’t well characterized or presented in the game, and is basically
a talking version of the nameless assault troopers you face in any
Cerberus-centric level. His final confrontation in the Cerberus HQ was
jarringly out of place for the series, and all-in-all, equates to something
from a terrible anime they used to play Friday nights on YTV. If I were to be generous,
however, you could interpret Kai Leng as an example of a character who has a
symbiotic existence between organic and synthetic; but due to how it is
handled, I sincerely doubt it.
I spent a lot of the ME3 hype-phase speculated about the
return of my favourite and not-so-favourite squadmates. I was pleased to see
that everyone was dealt with creatively and in a compelling manner. The characters
actually had *lives* outside of Shepard; they moved on and did things, developed new relationships and cultivated their own problems and achievements. Their encounters with Shepard were mostly coincidental foregoing the
knowledge that we all knew they were going to be in-game anyway. This is why I
found Miranda’s presence so infuriating. She contacts you several times just to
chat- she talks like she’s begging for your help, but then denies she needs you
at all. It feels like the writers really didn’t know how to include her in the
game, so they tacked on something due to her being a love interest and
therefore “needed” to be there in some way. The escalation of her investigation
of her father’s “dynasty” doesn't quell any of these feelings either; to me it
just proves my point due to the clumsy over-compensation and info-vomit about
some shady Cerberus experiments proving what we already knew- that they're evil.
Let us wrap this up with that lovely topic about how the ending is shitty. Now, I’m not one of those petition-signers demanding that BioWare somehow change the ending. Personally I thought mine was fairly unique and my brain did chew on it for a little while after. But let’s be honest people, we all knew the ending would be retarded. How could you not? When the series had been building up that mecha-C’thulu and his cosmic buddies were coming to fuck everyone up, how could you *possibly* solve it without a deus ex machina? I won’t dwell on it anymore, but I find that Shepard’s story on the whole has left BioWare in an awkward position in terms of continuation of the franchise.
Mass Effect’s familiarity is based on what we have seen in the three games-, which is a story of
impending doom at the height of galactic civilization. Therefore, a story before Shepard’s time would exhibit a
universe that isn’t as developed as the era where Shepard existed, and probably
wouldn’t have the same feel to it. A concurrent story where you play a pirate
or soldier that isn’t involved with Shepard at all would be a hollow experience
knowing that all of your efforts and the things you experience are going to
grind to a fiery halt to the hands of cosmic monsters. And of course, due to the glaring
difference between the possible endings of ME3, a sequel would alienate the fans
who didn’t choose the ending BioWare might choose to build off of.
Oh, also, the N7 patch was made of fucking Velcro.
In summation:
-
A great game that is probably a candidate for my
Top Five Games of 2012
-
If you haven’t played the first two games, PLAY
THEM FIRST. Mass Effect as a series
has a fairly time-consuming barrier of entry, but if you want the richest
experience possible, you need to pick up the first two.
-
Long time fans have already played it and formed
their opinions on it, but if there’s even half a person out there who has
played ME and ME2 and *hasn’t* yet played ME3, you should check it out for the
closure at least. Everything you know and love is intact and I can guarantee that
the majority of the game is worth the noticeable dip at the end.
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