![]() ![]() Though it has the conveniences of a modern sandbox – maps, fast travel, icons, and the like – Oros is wild in a way that prior Far Cry games were not. The land is populated with wolves, jaguars, bears, mammoths, and saber-toothed fucking tigers, and any and all of those creatures can kill you without too much trouble. Its residents are constantly at war, and only a fraction of those residents are human. That’s not to say that life (or survival) is any easier in Oros than it was in Far Cry 4‘s Kyrat. Thanks to his affinity for wild animals, Takkar even has a privileged standing within his tribe, placing him in a leadership position at the outset of the game. He knows the flora and the fauna and he knows what it takes to survive. Takkar is not a domesticated westerner displaced in a remote locale. ![]() ![]() The difference (beyond the Stone Age setting) is that Takkar is of his world in a way that former Far Cry protagonists were not. Takkar must reunite the scattered remnants of his tribe after a disastrous hunting trip gone awry. The plot revolves around two warring prehistoric tribes – the Wenja and the Udam – in which you play as Takkar, a seasoned Wenja hunter known as the Beast Master who possesses the unique ability to tame wild animals. It’s an open world with a sprawling map dotted with enemy camps and collectibles and other points of interest. In the essentials, Far Cry Primal feels a lot like any other installment in the series. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |