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God Of War III Remastered Review

Though various producers releasing old games on the current generation of consoles, new players have the chance to experience titles they didn’t catch the first time around. Taking those gamers into the crease is important, but people who loved the original version are also considering for an incentive to return to their favorites. Many definitive releases provide to recognized fans by adding new tweaks and features. God of War III Remastered is not one of those games.

 

God of War 3 Remastered for PlayStation 4 evokes the excitement of the threequel, thanks to the addition of 1080p resolution, a steadier frame rate that typically sits around 60 frames per second, and high-definition textures and lighting effects. These graphical touch-ups make Kratos’ final mission for revenge against the Olympian gods even more stunningly gory. The “meh” plot leftovers a weak point, but the outstanding battle and action-platforming retold us why we love this ultra-gory series.

 

God of War III is the conclusion to an heroic three-part story, with Kratos attack Mount Olympus in a hunt to kill Zeus – and any other god who gets in his path. The battle is fluid and fast, and we can thrash out a variety of classy attacks with ease. A great collection of weapons and upgrades makes it enjoyable to experiment with your skills and find a fighting style that plays to your strengths. When you aren’t squaring off against group of enemies or imposing bosses, you are treated to jaw-dropping setpiece moments that make the world seem impossibly massive and alive. From the opening moments to the final credits, the action remains intense and entertaining.

 

God of War 3’s already had an extraordinary graphics aged sensibly well over the past five years, and are even better with modern textures and lighting. Walls in Olympia gleam more brightly and shadows in Hades flickr more threatening. Blood showers through the air with the elegance of a flying ballet dancer. Kratos is much more better: his armor is formed with fine detail and is oft-splattered in shiny blood. It may be odd to say fierceness has a attractiveness to it, but the glossy HD graphics make even the macabre pretty.

 

The only upset in the graphical fidelity came when we sprinted into characters like Helios and Hephaestus, who for some reason weren’t given the same responsiveness to detail as Kratos. Even with improved lighting and color, their lower-res textures make them look a bit off, and serve as a reminder that this game was made for a previous generation of hardware.

 

God of War 3 Remastered also comes with all GoW 3 DLC (including a couple of amusing Challenge Modes that handicap you to make terminating enemies harder), plus a new Photo Mode that lets you pause and take screenshots of Kratos in action. The latter is a cool concept, but we hate how smashing the wrong button during fight takes it up; it interrupts the action. The good news is that we got a couple of pretty remarkable photos of Kratos raining gory terror on his enemies.

 

Conclusion

God of War 3 was an exciting feat for its day, and it still amazes today in God of War 3 Remastered. Its attractive graphics are better than ever, and a higher frame rate adds more fluidity to the action. The story will be puzzling to newcomers, as it picks up right in the middle of the saga, but the exciting battle and classic set pieces hold up exceptionally well.

 

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