So Is Destiny A bit of good?5259301

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Destiny does not have any doubt been certainly one of this years most discussed games. For months rumors have already been circulating around the internet, magazines, social media systems concerning the game, communicating with them varying from what it will look like, think that and sound like. Well, by last Tuesday we could finally answer those questions.


Destiny, a game released by Bungie - legendary game developers behind mega-hits Halo and Call of Duty - can be a mamoth MMO/FSI title set in our solar system. The structure of the story is the fact that, in the distant future, humanity entered a golden age and thus attianed the technology and the ability to travel across the solar system. With all the desire to travel however, also came the need to obtain knowledge and secrets, thus unlocking hidden dark truths behind our solar system. The effect was utter destruction, leaving mankind in tatters as various species of alien lifeforms invaded our planet, leaving us with one pitifully small city in which to use being a HQ to take back our lost empire - kind of the crux with the game.

So my point is, is it any good?

What you usually expect from such highly-anticipated video gaming is beautiful, crisp graphics with ridiculously meticulous attention to detail and Destiny achieves this spectacularly. Every possible object looks incredible, varying from your way grass and bushes sway within the wind, towards the way your characters hands crease and fold just as if they were real hands. There isn't any doubts how the game looks spectacular - congratulations Bungie on that front.

However, when you play with the single-player - a place that most FSI titles have a tendency to ignore nowadays, instead emphasizing multi-player - things get a little dull. You begin to will no longer take notice of the beautiful graphics and instead start to groan in the repetitive gameplay of descending from the spaceship about the moon, shooting your path through waves of weak enemies without dying, obtaining an artifact from a cavern while emptying clip after clip of ammunition with a bullet-sponge 'boss' enemy, before completing the mission and then repeat the same steps in these one.

The single-player mode is nothing other than boring. It offers almost nothing original, unlike Halo and Call of Duty, and leaves us asking precisely what did the developers spend their $300 million budget on?

However, the joy of the game will come in its multi-player mode - the hugely rewarding Crucible. Destiny is probably the largest multi-player game ever created; in reality, you can't even play the game without having to be connecting to the internet (a bummer without having it), which suggests you're constantly attached to other gamers. Inside the Crucible, you'll find very familiar gme modes - team deathmatch, checkpoint control and capture the flag - but everything runs so smoothly with highly entertaining gameplay throughout.

Where Destiny excels best though is through its levelling up, 'loot 'n' shoot', Borderlands style gameplay. There's nothing more exciting amongst people than upgrading your weapon and armour and also noticing you have become pretty much invincible to your enemies (online as well as offline).

Overall, destiny 2 inventory manager is an extremely good game that's certainly well worth the money, nevertheless it just feels a little disappointing as there is very little there that seems original. We've seen it all before, and that's perhaps whyit was not getting the rave reviews that people were expecting.