Battlefield bad company 2 ultimate edition ps3 review




















By Nate Ahearn Updated: 5 May pm. It's only been a couple of months and is already shaping up to be one of the best ever for gamers.

If your wallet hasn't already been emptied, Electronic Arts and development studio DICE have tossed yet another videogame on the pile that can't be missed. Battlefield: Bad Company 2 ups the intensity and visual prowess of its predecessor, while still delivering one of the most compelling multiplayer games around.

If you were to buy Bad Company 2 solely for the single-player campaign, you might come away a bit disappointed. That's not to say it's particularly bad in any way, but it doesn't feel impressive enough to stand on its own as a great experience.

Once again, the multiplayer game is the star of the Battlefield show. If you already have a copy of Bad Company 2, you'll likely want to skip this release. However, if you were someone who was hesitant to pick up DICE's latest high-quality creation because a little game called Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 2 was still spinning in your disc drive, then Ultimate Edition is certainly worth your time. Keep reading for the reasons why. For sixty bucks players get what essentially amounts to the full Battlefield: Bad Company 2 Limited Edition experience which is to say you get a few weapon and vehicle upgrades along with some fresh maps for multiplayer as well as the Onslaught co-op mode DLC and the beloved downloadable title Battlefield: Sadly none of the content in Ultimate Edition is new in any way.

Instead, the real attraction of the package is that you get all of this great Battlefield: Bad Company 2 content in one box. It's a bit of an annoyance that you have to enter in three different download codes on Xbox two on PS3 to get your hands on everything, but that shouldn't be a surprise given EA's new initiative to try to bolster new-game sales through the use of one-time-use codes.

The single-player campaign follows the story of a rag-tag bunch of soldiers as they traipse around the world on the hunt for a mythical weapon of mass destruction which absolutely must not fall into the hands of the Russians. It's a typical story of unlikely heroes as they attempt to save the world, and it will take you across a great variety of locations that range from frozen mountains to densely packed jungles.

These gorgeous locales are the first thing that will spring out at you as you begin the fight. The vistas and skyboxes look nearly photorealistic in many situations, and DICE did a wonderful job blending the particle effects and game objects in the foreground with the more static backdrops.

The result is a sense of depth that few videogame worlds can offer. Things become more impressive yet when the action kicks in. Returning from the last Bad Company game are nearly fully destructible environments. If an enemy soldier is holed up in a second-story bedroom taking potshots at you, all you have to do is send a rocket at that wall and he'll either wind up dead or fully exposed. The same line of thinking applies to just about anything you see — send enough firepower at it and you can watch it crumble.

Once you're done ogling the smoke trails or mountain ranges in the distance, you'll start to notice that Bad Company 2 has taken a few cues from the Call of Duty franchise. The last Battlefield game was the first to introduce a fully fleshed out storyline and it stumbled a bit in the process.

The humor was goofy and over the top, the open mission design was a bit too open, and everything seemed coated in a dense fog. A lot has changed and improved for the sequel. The big change comes with a more streamlined and cinematic approach to the action. The dialogue is less overtly inane, though it does offer its fair share of humor, and the level design feels more straightforward.

While the last Bad Company game couldn't hold my attention, this one kept me interested and having fun from start to finish. It shouldn't come as any surprise that this Battlefield game has some great mechanics. The guns react well, and sound fantastic.

The vehicles handle smoothly and really do a great job of making you feel like the king of the battlefield. The instant-respawns and med kit injections of the last Bad Company have been replaced by the more standard checkpoints and regenerative health bar and that makes the challenge of war feel more realistic. To top things off, the AI squad mates at your side act like real soldiers in battle.

They'll press the attack while you flank and hold off the enemy while you duck behind cover to recuperate. Many games slap you in a squad of largely ineffective soldiers and let you do all of the heavy lifting.

Bad Company 2 is a refreshing change of pace in this regard. Of course, if you want to start nitpicking, there are plenty of instances to call out.

Some of the details and little pieces of the environment stream into view a bit late. There still are no arms drawn on screen when driving a vehicle, causing a poltergeist-like steering wheel to move on its own. On the Xbox version, slow loading from the disc causes the player to be locked out for as much as five seconds from throwing grenades or using the knife when picking up a new weapon or changing kits this issue went away when installing the game onto a hard drive.

These are mostly small complaints and, for me, the campaign's only real troubles rest with the presentation and pacing. At your side is a crew of largely one-dimensional characters who are good for a laugh every now and then. This cast exists mainly to deliver one-liners and to direct you through the battlefield to the next objective. It's hard to even think of them as people after watching them take a rocket propelled grenade to the face and then get up and go right back into the fight.

Though the action has been streamlined, it feels like Bad Company 2 just missed the "epic" feeling that it seems the developers were going for. Part of the problem is in the direction of the cutscenes, but mostly I feel like it rests with the non-stop high-intensity approach to gameplay. In a given level, you can do everything from sniping soldiers to manning a turret on the side of a helicopter to calling in air strikes — all in rapid succession.

You're something of a Rambo super-soldier, well versed in every facet of war. With the constant action, it feels like there is very little tension building outside of the game's opening moments. There's tons of variety to the gameplay and all of it is a great deal of fun, but it doesn't quite come together to be a top-tier experience. And with such a frantic campaign pace, it is over in short order.

I blew through the game in just a few evenings of lazy play, probably clocking in under six hours. A collectible weapon system does offer a reason to go back for a second or third run, but this isn't the kind of campaign you'll be returning to again and again. For many, the shortcomings in the campaign won't matter one bit. These people come for the multiplayer online game, and that's where Bad Company 2 delivers. Positive: 58 out of Mixed: 1 out of Negative: 0 out of Battlefield: Bad Company 2 is as complete a package as you could ever ask for.

All this publication's reviews Read full review. Both single player and multiplayer experiences excel in Bad Company 2, and the sequel is a great step up from its first iteration. This is one of the best and most addictive on-line experiences in a shooter in years. This really is one of the best looking console shooters I've ever played.

It's kind of like DICE has trained for a game development biathlon, resulting in its first game where the single-player mode is just as good as the multiplayer -- and that says DICE has what it takes to be among the best in the business.

Extreme Gamer. Console Monster. Overall Battlefield: Bad Company 2 is a sequel worthy of taking your attention away from other shooter out there. Total Video Games. There's no denying the appeal of Bad Company 2's multiplayer.

DICE is still expertly nailing down what it pioneered all the way back in , and the experience remains far from stale.

However, poor design in the single-player makes for a campaign that's not only lacklustre throughout, but cripplingly buggy at times as well. User Reviews. Write a Review. Positive: 98 out of Mixed: 10 out of Negative: 9 out of An incredible game to say the least. The Single Player Campaign is the best in its class and the Multiplayer has some of those epic An incredible game to say the least.

The Single Player Campaign is the best in its class and the Multiplayer has some of those epic 'Battlefield' moments. And, the way that you can customize your 'classes' in a multiplayer game is much better than those of Call of Duty.

It is definitely a better game than the first Bad Company and is worth the purchase. I could not disagree more with JohnD, as if one side has something such as a helicopter it can get frustrating getting killed over and over but it puts you into a hard situation that YOU have to deal with.

Also, if you level up or unlock something in-game you get to change and use it, in-game. This is incredible. Just finished the campaing hour ago and it was absolutely amazing. DICE studio managed to make Damn DICE studio managed to make an absolute peak of Battlefield games so far, even in is this game awesome. First of all things i have to say that i love the destructible environment, in compare to CoD is and 0. Then i must mention the story in campaign.. American-Russia conflict located in South America located in bigger part of game.

Characters have excelent written dialogues and quotes. Level design is well, maps are big enough. Driving model maybe could be a little bit better designed but that cant change my rating of this game. BC2 aims for realism, while MW2 is a simply arcade game when you run here and there shooting to everything that moves no brain requested.



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