Testseek.com have collected 81 expert reviews of the Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor and the average rating is 80%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor.
November 2014
(80%)
81 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
80010081
The editors liked
Nemesis System lets you create a worthy foe
Awesome Mounts
Fun Gameplay that lets you choose your own play style
The editors didn't like
Weak Boss Fights in main quest line
Lots of QTEs
Forgettable OST
Reviews
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Published: 2014-09-01, Author: Andrew , review by: stuff.tv
True to Tolkien, Nemesis System is ingenious, Gameplay is fluid and fun
Graphically underwhelming, Initial bombardment of instructions
Abstract: It's been about six months since BTR compared the RX 480 versus the GTX 1060 and versus the 290X. It will be interesting to see if there have been any major performance changes since then. Has AMD neglected Hawaii in favor of Polaris, and what about Pasca...
Performance summary chartHere are the summary charts of 25 games and 2 synthetic tests. The highest settings are always chosen and it is usually DX11; DX12 is picked above DX11 where available, and the settings are ultra or maxed. Specific settings are li...
If you are buying a top performing video card right now and looking for the highest performance at a really good price, the GTX 1070 is the only choice since the GTX 1080 is much more expensive...
TDP and power draw is almost unbelievable at 150W for such a high-performance GPU, using only one 8-pin PCIe cable; in contrast the Fury X requires two 8-pin cables, Overclockability is very good so far – GPU Boost 3.0 works with the Precision X overcloc
If you are buying a top performing video card right now and looking for the highest performance at a really good price, the GTX 1070 is the only choice since the GTX 1080 is much more expensive.We would like to award the Founder's Edition of the GTX 1070...
We are not only surprised by how great of a game Shadow of Mordor is, but at how little it demands from your PC's hardware. At the surprisingly attractive low detail setting, configured to render 1280x720 pixels, the game ran smoothly on a sub-$100 Radeon...
Great animations. Good voice acting, and dialogue reminiscent of Peter Jackson's Lord of the Rings movies. Nemesis System really builds Orcish Nemeses.
Repetitive, shallow combat system. Bland story. Forced, boring, instant-fail stealth missions. Small and empty for an open world. Redundant power-ups and perks. Unskippable cutscenes interrupt combat
Middle-Earth: Shadow of Mordor has a cool way to allow your actions to develop your enemies in its Nemesis system. And it looks nice, too, but shallow combat and frustrating design choices mar this Tolkien-inspired PC brawler....
Middle-earth: Shadow of Mordor is an example of a innovative idea well-executed upon. That Warner Bros. was willing to attach the Middle-earth brand to a new idea is good evidence of that. The resulting product works well as a piece of entertainment, ampl...
Abstract: The combat feels fantastic, every movement feels weighted, executions and other moves take realistic amounts of time. Countering plays a big role in combat, remembering to counter could be the difference between pulling off that awesome combo you've been...
Abstract: Compared to similar beloved multi-media franchises like Batman or Star Wars, the Lord of the Rings and the any other works of J.R.R. Tolkien have a far smaller success rate of being translated into video games. Interplay had a few decent hits in the 80s i...