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Deus ex mankind divided review
Deus ex mankind divided review









  1. #Deus ex mankind divided review full#
  2. #Deus ex mankind divided review series#

#Deus ex mankind divided review full#

An innocent-looking curio shop might have a secret passage leading to a storage locker full of valuable items, or sneaking through a neighboring apartment might lead to you stumbling into one of the meaty multi-part sidequests. This harmonious relationship between mechanics and environmental design extends to the returning augments as well, lending a sense of value and purpose to even the most basic-seeming of upgrades.īeing able to leap, sneak, muscle, or hack my way into almost anywhere wouldn’t mean much if there wasn’t anything there worth discovering, but my feats of high-tech infiltration were always rewarded in one way or another. Remote hacking a second-floor window shutter and then Icarus Dashing up to it became my favorite one-two punch of stealthy infiltration, granting me easy access to more than a few places where the front door wasn’t an option. Experimenting with it allows you to manipulate everything from laser grids and mines to ladders and window shutters, opening up whole new possibilities I had no idea were there upon first glance. That particular use synergizes perfectly with the Remote Hacking aug, which is probably the most transformative upgrade. More often, I used it to dash directly from ground level up to a second-story window.

#Deus ex mankind divided review series#

I once used it to dash across a series of rafters high above an entire roomful of enemies with none of them the wiser. But it wasn’t until I started noticing subtle new routes I could take towards objectives that I was sold on it. It’s also a great gap-closer for swiftly knocking out guards from a few paces out. For instance, the Icarus Dash allows you to cover short distances in the blink of an eye, which makes it a fine escape tool. These deviously fun gadgets would be good on their own, but it’s the thoughtfully crafted environments that tease out their true potential. They’d almost be too powerful if not for the associated energy and ammo costs that come with them, which are fine-tuned so that I wasn’t too shy to use one, but it still felt a little bit special every time I made the decision to pull the trigger. The energy-draining Titan Armor ripples angrily as it shrugs off everything from bullets to grenades, the Tesla Arm attachment locks onto and incapacitates multiple targets at range, and when someone absolutely needs to die immediately, the arm-mounted nanoblade launcher pierces flesh and armor alike - knocking its target clean off their feet and pinning the corpse to the nearest wall with tremendous force. A handful of powerful, sexy new experimental augments that you can wire into grizzled cyborg protagonist Adam Jensen are at least partially to thank for that. Even more so than its predecessors, this iteration of Deus Ex succeeds in making me feel like a cybernetically enhanced super agent that no security system can withstand.











Deus ex mankind divided review