Metro Exodus is a more than worthy successor to Last Light, successfully introducing open levels to break up the more linear sequences, while also retaining the unique look, feel and incredible atmosphere that made the previous games so memorable...
Solid and definitely has an audience. There could be some hard-to-ignore faults, but the experience is fun.How we score: The destructoid reviews guide...
Abstract: Warning: This review contains mild spoilersAfter the disappointment of a certain other post apocalyptic game that came out late last year, Metro Exodus is a great game for anyone that wants to get their nuclear fallout fix. Despite the very unfortunate si...
Great story, Superb Graphics, Ray traced global illumination + DLSS, Incredible atmosphere, Deeply immersive & well polished,
Self indulgent and unskippable scenes, Enemy AI, Checkpoint saves,
Metro Exodusis a really good game and it is the most fun that we have had with any game in at least the past 2 years. We were completely taken with and consumed by the game only stopping to eat and to sleep. We neglected everything else while playing it...
Successfully converts Metro to a S.T.A.L.K.E.R.-esque open world, Discusses sociopolitical and religious themes in a way few games dare
Buggy, Dialogue performances feel a bit dated
I've said it before: I'll take flawed-but-interesting over polished-but-generic every single time, and Metro has long epitomized that belief for me. Sure, Metro Exodus is rough around the edges, there's no disputing that. I was annoyed having to replay th...
Published: 2019-02-13, Author: Michael , review by: gamespot.com
Endearing characters and earnest interactions bring you closer to the crew and journey, Top-notch world building with intriguing stories throughout, despite the genre tropes, Crafting and customization systems put you in control without sacrificing tensio
Open sandbox areas are a bit sparse and occasionally a pain to navigate, Technical issues (performance spikes, crashes, bugs) can be frustrating