Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League Review – Loot World Order

Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League Review - Loot World Order

Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League Review - Loot World Order

The tightrope to walk when writing a review is assessing a game for what it is, not what you wished it would be. Though some wished Rocksteady would make a game more like its Batman Arkham series, it’s not fair to critique Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League for being something other than that. Instead, one must examine it for what it is: a game-as-a-service looter shooter applied to an all-star roster of DC Comics heroes and villains. You zip about a city, shoot aliens, get gear, and repeat. And, as it turns out, that game isn’t very good.

In Suicide Squad, teams of one to four players step into the boots of DC Comics’ wise-cracking villains Harley Quinn, Deadshot, King Shark, and Captain Boomerang. Designed in a similar vein as Crystal Dynamics’ Avengers and WB Montreal’s Gotham Knights, Suicide Squad is an open-world game littered with proper nouns like Afflictions, Boosts, and Shield Harvesting, buried in colorful resources, and intensely focused on having players chase better and better loot such as guns, shields, and melee weapons as it (and the all-important endgame) goes on. The intent is to keep players invested for months to come, and the game isn’t shy about that.

Suicide Squad’s premise–in which the titular foursome must battle the typical good guys as they’ve been taken over by Brainiac–would’ve made a hell of a comic book, and though it should work as a game just as seamlessly given how well superhero fare can translate to games, it sometimes struggles to do so given how it bizarrely moves past would-be major events with the spectacle of an office party.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

About Post Author