A wonderful return to roots, reading traditions, reviving popular game mechanics. Veterans of the Assassin’s Creed series finally have hope for the extremely tense Open world RPG parts developers are returning to series basics, which we all remember so well. In this regard, it must be said that “Mirage” copes with its task well.
The game actually plays exactly as we remember it from that era. ten years ago. Players mostly get exactly what they want, and to be honest, in terms of gameplay mechanics, Mirage is more similar to Assassin’s Creed than the third game itself. The only sad thing is that literally copied game mechanics stopped being fun ten years ago.
He speaks to you at the very beginning of the game. William Miles, that is, the father of the original hero, and thus you have hope of his proper participation. Unfortunately, his speech is the last connection to the present you will encounter for the rest of the game. If you expected that the events of Valhalla would develop further and the story would finally begin to develop somewhere from the end of the third part, you are mistaken and can safely skip the game. Personally, I think this is an absolutely terrible waste of potential. If you haven’t played the latest game yet, let me give you a quick, spoiler-free review. Already in progress Valhalla we managed to encounter one elderly killer named Basim. Basim helps the main character Eivor from time to time during the game and even becomes the final boss at the end.
However, this still won’t be enough for a real cliffhanger. The main character of the present, Leila, decides to descend near Basim’s corpse into an anima-like machine created only by the First Civilization. As a result, the mighty staff of Herma falls from her hands, which brings the lying Basim back to life after a thousand years of decay. Do you understand? There is a character who, after a thousand years she came back to life and in the work devoted to her life we learn practically nothing about her present condition. I have to admit to myself that the resurrection did seem like an accident. The believable level of sci-fi elements of the first parts, which gave the feeling that something like this could really happen, was replaced by essentially pure fantasy. I would probably forgive this if it at least led to more active development of the story in the present, but, unfortunately, this does not happen.
Source :Indian TV
