![]() What's really impressive though is the damage system, as you'll need to carefully consider where you're hitting your target for maximum impact. Here you use the left stick to drive and turn, which takes some getting used to, and then you use the right stick to control the turret. We'll start with tanks because we'd say they're the most fun. That said, it's great that you get tutorials about how each vehicle works, giving you an overview of the basics. A simple brief at the start to help you identify how to organise your vehicles, crews, and even how to get into a game would've been nice because we can imagine many would-be Thunderers might get scared off by the UI. The menus from the very start are packed with things that you need to know about, from vehicles to game modes, icons to numbers, flags to statistics, and everything in between. ![]() What you need to know about War Thunder before anything else is that there's a lot to take in, which is actually our biggest criticism. So why review it now? Well, the full launch of the game on Xbox One combined with the fact that we never reviewed it back in the day inspired us to take a closer look at the game's many vehicles and see how they fare on the proverbial battlefield. It's actually not a new game and as most of you probably already know it has been available on the PS4 since day one, and on PC since even before that. War - what is it good for? Well, it's not "absolutely nothing", in fact, as it's provided us with games like World of Tanks, Armored Warfare, and Gaijin Entertainment's War Thunder, the latter of which we've been playing on Xbox One after it recently launched as a free-to-play game on Microsoft's console.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |