![]() Vita versions of the Uncharted, Resistance, and Assassin’s Creed franchises proved to be lackluster, but Sony has one last big name to draw on in 2012. We have enjoyable titles like Tales From Space and Gravity Rush, but nothing has made the portable a must-have for mainstream audiences. Everything that makes up the core Call of Duty experience is here in Black Ops Declassified the only question is if it can manage to maintain that little something extra that's helped make Call of Duty great.Nine months after the Vita launched in North America, it still doesn’t have its killer app. With Nihilistic, the team behind the mediocre Vita shooter Resistance: Burning Skies, on development duties, that impression isn't really alleviated in any way.īut it's Call of Duty on a Vita, and that's perhaps enough to extend the Vita's appeal beyond early adopters. ![]() The scrappy, lo-fi nature seems more fitting of throwaway entries such as the PSP's Road to Victory than the slick action of the core series. ![]() The boxes are all ticked - there's Team Deathmatch, Kill Confirmed and other, unspecified modes are spread across that slim selection of six maps, and there's an XP and leveling system that allows you to prestige - but there's no sign of the taut design that's helped propel Call of Duty to its success. Near, meanwhile, can be used through the share a class feature, which allows friends to access each others builds and play with equipment even it they've yet to unlock it themselves.Īway from the novelties, though, it's threadbare. The rear touchscreen comes into play too, being used to hold your breath when lining up a sniper shot. It's brought in meaningfully elsewhere, too: get a kill-streak in multiplayer and you can direct the rewarded mortar strike with the touchscreen. The Vita's touchscreen is used, most interestingly, to equip, cook and then aim grenades or throwing knives (or, as Activision's Ryan Scott put it, they can be 'directionalised' - it's a feature that's new to the series, so why not make up a new word in its honour?). Its single-player will be told in small, objective based missions designed with portable gaming in mind, and that's not the only concession being made to the platform in hand. Multiplayer's only available in 4v4 - and it's only available over wi-fi.ĭeclassified bridges the gap between the mainline Black Ops games, threading the story of Mason, Woods and Hudson between those two games. This was always going to be a cut-down Call of Duty experience, though, and enough of the formula remains intact to make Black Ops Declassified a familiar and, at times, exciting proposition. Without that frame rate, and with only eight players ever able to run through its corridors and cramped spaces, it's a bleak looking affair. Shattered, one of six multiplayer maps that's available, is a mess of rubble, overturned cars and bombed out buildings, a central alleyway running down the spine of the map. That's not a feature of the Vita version, which is no real surprise - but what's left behind looks far from appealing. After a slow start, Sony are likely hoping that combination alone will give the handheld the boost it so desperately needs, but a glimpse at Black Ops Declassified gives some indication of why it's taken over a year for a serious look at the game.Ĭall of Duty's always been a game that's spartan with its looks, the run-down shanties and sprawling complexes all being smoothed over by that trademark 60fps refresh rate.
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