Game Review: Middle Earth: Shadow of Mordor - 20 Hours Against Sauron's Army
I can’t imagine that a lot of readers would
need an introduction to Middle Earth:
Shadow of Mordor. It’s towards the
top of a lot of Game of the Year lists for 2014, and with good reason. What strikes me as odd is the significant
crowd of gamers still on the fence about the game; more than anything, this is
my attempt to sway them to pick up a copy and join the fight against Sauron’s
Army!
Shadow
of Mordor
is set in the lands of Mordor (not surprisingly) during the period between the
end of The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings, when Sauron is
still establishing his army and converting Mordor into a staging area. Unlike many other Middle Earth-related games,
much of the narrative ground is therefore new and untouched. This makes the barrier to entry, from a “mythology”
level, very low. That said, for Tolkien’s
devoted, there are plenty of references to the established lore. Even the liberties taken by the writers are,
in the end, easy to accept.
What makes the game super-accessible is the
familiarity of the gameplay. In essence,
the mechanics take the melee and stealth elements of the Batman: Arkham games and mix them with the open-world dynamics of Assassins Creed. In other words, unlike the Arkham games, where the biggest fights
tend to take place in relatively confined spaces/maps, Talion can find himself
swarmed just about anywhere, be it the middle of a Uruk stronghold or simply the
vast countryside in-between.
Scattered amongst the thousands of orcs and
Uruks are Captains and Warchiefs, and it’s not uncommon to start what seems
like a simple enough battle for experience and stumble into a fight against a
nearly-unbeatable Captain and his 50 closest friends. Such encounters rarely end well, and worse,
whichever enemy strikes the killing blow levels up as a result, becoming a
captain that much harder to beat. Oh,
and they remember you, which is a nice touch.
As a result, rushing in with Batman-esque
combat skills is typically the last option.
Stealth and intelligence-gathering go a long way, and thus formulating strategy
for each new mission and encounter with Captains (necessary to gather the runes
to add buffs to your weapons) is the heart of the game. After all, you are one semi-undead ex-Ranger
running around behind enemy lines, with very little in the way of
reinforcements; forcing the player to think through each major engagement (and
even minor ones) is a great way to put the player into the psychological space
of the protagonist.
Those encounters with Captains provide much
of the grist for the side missions, but the game design is clever enough to
make sure that as the game evolves, those encounters take on new aspects. Not only that, but for those connected
online, one will get missions to eliminate Captains that killed your friends
when they were playing! Talion can even
intercede in duels between Captains to ensure that a weaker opponent, perhaps,
lives to fight another day, thus letting the enemy weaken itself.
From a graphical point of view, I am playing
on the PS4, so this is ostensibly an ideal console experience. However, the game was also available for the
previous-gen consoles, so the final product is not far removed from late-period
PS3 fare. It’s a small step above Assassin’s Creed: Rogue, for example,
but not remotely on the level of detail and realism as, say, Assassin’s Creed: Unity or Dragon Age: Inquisition. It doesn’t really matter in the long run; the
gameplay is so addictive, and traversing Mordor is so seamless, that the power
is clearly devoted to the right priorities.
WHAT WORKS
Despite the game being open-world and largely
available right from the start, the game is designed to increase the challenge
as the player moves through the story.
For example, when running around Mordor in the first few hours, the
common enemies will consist almost entirely of low-level, easily-killable and
countered foes. Progressively, new enemy
types are introduced to those same areas as Talion’s abilities mount; this
completely changes the gameplay and shifts the player more and more into a
strategic mindset.
This also means that all that time gathering
experience to unlock new abilities is hardly wasted; the player soon discovers
that sticking with tried-and-true tactics will only work so long. The combos are largely simple enough to
trigger, so when the player is looking for some new way to approach an
untenable Captain or boss fight, digging into the arsenal is not only
rewarding, but intuitive. It’s a better
scenario than “earning” an ability that is completely unnecessary.
WHAT DIDN’T WORK
It’s hard to pinpoint any specific issue with
the game; for the most part, playing through the first half of the game has
been nothing but enjoyable. (The
southern areas of Mordor are locked out until roughly halfway through the story
campaign.) There are the occasional
glitches that can irritate, of course; the most memorable one was in the middle
of a story mission, where the unlocking of a key combo temporarily freezes the
game. However, it’s as simple as waiting
a minute or two for the glitch to resolve itself, and then it’s back to the
action.
There are also some elements that fall prey
to repetition; some of the dialogue following a “death”, for example, or just
the color palette of Mordor as a whole.
For example, by the tenth time Talion asks his inner wraith about the
forge towers, you really want the wraith to change things up and berate him for
not listening. Also, after you “die”, you
get treated to a rundown of all the changes to Sauron’s army and the lineup of
Captains, which can take a while. On the
other hand, one could take that as an incentive to avoid dying!
THE
BOTTOM LINE
Now that I’m roughly halfway done with it, I
can see why Shadow of Mordor is
getting so many votes for Game of the Year.
In fact, I would be so bold as to say that Ubisoft might want to take a
page out of this game’s handbook when it comes to future iterations of the Assassin’s Creed franchise. If this level of stealth and combat can be
seamlessly applied to future open-world games, then the possibilities are endless.
- Strong connections to Middle Earth lore
- Tried-and-true gameplay mechanics
- Progressive enemy AI forces the player to learn new tricks
- Occasional glitches and repetition