Like a lot of people, I do have plans and ideas and even New Year resolutions for what I’d like to do in 2022, but I thought it would be a good opportunity with 2021 now behind us and 2022 upon us to sit down and reflect on a few things.
This time I take a look at some of the games I completed in 2021.
If
I’m honest, the list is pretty small. I would dearly love to dedicate
as much time as I did when I was younger to this hobby, but it's hard to
find the time between being an adult, making a living and keeping on
top of my health. The irony is when you are a kid, you normally don’t
have the budget to get so many games.
I still found it enjoyable,
and hopefully I’ll be able to chip away and my massive collection the
next year too. So here’s a run down of what games I played and completed
in 2021.
Halo 5 Guardians (Xbox One)
Halo 5: Guardians
was launched in 2015 and is the well known first-person shooter video
game franchise developed by Bungie and now 343 Industries and published
by Microsoft Studios.
The game's plot follows two fire teams of
human super soldiers: Blue Team, led by Master Chief, and Fire team
Osiris, led by Spartan Locke and contained various multiplayer modes and
the ability to customize your Spartan.
Funnily enough, this was a
game I started way back when I first got my Xbox One but never got
around to completing. I was playing this with a very good friend of
mine, who in the past also completed the campaign mode of the previous
Halo games with together.
2020 was the year we dusted off our
Spartan armour and grabbed our guns and finally saw this game through to
the end. Was it worth it? I'd say yes and no.
Completing a game
was great, and I got to finally see the ending in all its glory, but at
the same time it felt a little anti-climatic, especially with Halo 4
wrapping everything up in a nice kinda way the story here felt a little
too open-ended.
Halo Infinite is out now, but I'm waiting till it gets the co-op multiplayer before I touch it.
Gears of War 4 (Xbox One)
Gears
of War 4 is a third-person shooter video game developed by The
Coalition and published by Microsoft Studios for Microsoft Windows and
Xbox One in 2016. It is the fourth main instalment in the Gears of War
series, and the first entry not to be developed by Epic Games.
Like with Halo this was a game I started long ago and only recently got around to completing.
I’ve
played the previous versions of the GOW (Gears of War) franchise with
my Halo brother in arms and completed them with him. It was the same for
Gears of War 4.
Much like Halo 5 the game play was amazing, and
the story was great, and it was nice to see different faces, but I felt
something was missing from this game. I suspect it was again because it
was the start of a new series, so the story didn’t wrap up much, and it
also felt a little anti-climatic and open-ended.
Saying that
though, I have the sequel GOW 5, so it's something I’ll begin working my
way through, and hopefully I can see how it matches up with GOW 4.
Tom Clancy’s The Division 2 (Xbox One)
Tom
Clancy's The Division 2 launched in 2019 is a little different from the
other games here since it's an online-only action role-playing video
game developed by Massive Entertainment and published by Ubisoft.
It
is basically a game as a service where it's online only and updated
regularly, much like the Destiny and Warframe game franchises. You could
also call it a pseudo MMO RPG.
This was the sequel to Tom
Clancy's The Division (2016), and was set in a near-future Washington,
D.C. in the aftermath of a genetically engineered virus known as "Green
Poison" being released, and follows an agent of the Strategic Homeland
Division as they try to rebuild the city.
I very much was a big
fan of the first game and played it very thoroughly, trying to complete
as much as possible from the story/lore. I enjoyed this game and
basically played solo. The story was pretty fun, and getting to
customize your agent is always fun too. I would say it felt very
different, as the first game perfectly captured the atmosphere of winter
quite well, but the change of location and weather did make the game
feel a little too different for me.
It was kinda fitting to have
played this and completed it in 2021 considering the ongoing situation
around the world, it feels there are some parallels.
Apparently
there is a new game in the series ‘Tom Clancy’s The Division:
Heartlands’ but I'm not sure how I feel about the free to play nature of
it. We will have to wait and see.
Crackdown 3 (Xbox One)
Crackdown
3 is an action-adventure video game launched in 2019 and developed by
Sumo Digital and published by Microsoft Studios for Microsoft Windows
and Xbox One. It continues the series nine years after the release
Crackdown 2 (Xbox 360).
This game is pretty much a sandbox game,
think GTA (Grand Theft Auto) but where you play the good
guys/police/agents and have superpowers which you can enhance by going
around collecting orbs that upgrade your superpowers. You can also
enhance your shooting by shooting, driving by driving and pulling off
cool stunts and strength through hand-to-hand combat.
I
absolutely love this game as I played the first and the second game
years back on the Xbox 360 and later on had to get my fix from Saints
Row 4 (which borrowed ideas from this franchise).
Much of the online reviews for this pan the game, but I enjoyed it.
This
game ended up being a strange mix of myself and my GOW/Halo gaming
brother completing it as the game allows for you to do co-op game play.
State of Decay 2 (Xbox One)
State
of Decay 2 is a survival video game launched in 2018 and developed by
Undead Labs and published by Xbox Game Studios. This game was a
follow-up to State of Decay, a game I never played previously. This game
much like the predecessor required players to build a community, manage
resources and survive against the horde of zombies.
It was
definitely fun to play, finding survivors, doing missions, helping out
other communities to survive the zombie horde. I found the managing a
community fun, though it was very different from what I had in mind. I
was thinking about a game where you could build yourself and survive the
zombie horde along or with others. In the end it was different from
what I wanted but nonetheless enjoyable.
This too ended up being a
game I played with my brother in arms as it comes with a good co-op
mode, though sadly you can only progress one map/save file via visiting
each other's worlds rather than having a shared one. Maybe a creation
mode and shared world would be something for a future State of Decay?
Remnants from the Ashes (PC)
On the verge of 2021 ending Remnant: From the Ashes was the last game I completed with previously mentioned brother in arms.
Remnant:
From the Ashes is an action role-playing third-person shooter developed
by Gunfire Games and published by Perfect World Entertainment. It was
released for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One in 2019 and
recently for PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X and Series S in 2021.
Unlike the previously mentioned games, Remnant: From the Ashes was a PC game rather than an Xbox game that I completed.
It
borrows its mechanics from franchises such as the Souls series and
combines melee combat, third-person shooter elements and allows you can
wield up to two gun weapons, one main weapon and one side arm, alongside
their melee weapon.
The plot is pretty interesting and takes you
on a pretty wild adventure. It’s a mix of Souls and Diablo and you can
find some good gear and depending on how you fight bosses you can get
different sort of weapons or gears.
Every map is different too so
if you play with a friend their world and maps are different too so
more opportunity for more gear and more maps and bosses.
Final thoughts
Looking
back, it seems like a lot of the games on that list were co-op games I
completed, except for the Division 2. Hopefully in 2022 I might have
more time for this hobby, but even if not I’ll squeeze in bits and
pieces whilst I can alongside life and my hobbies. Maybe I’ll have a
slightly different list which isn’t made up of 1st or 3rd person
shooters for the end of 2022.
Here’s to gaming a bit more in 2022.