Should i play deus ex human revolution




















Parents' Ultimate Guide to Support our work! Corona Column 3 Use these free activities to help kids explore our planet, learn about global challenges, think of solutions, and take action. Kid reviews for Deus Ex: Human Revolution. Based on our expert review. Based on 13 reviews. Based on 21 reviews. Add your rating. Parents say 13 Kids say Teen, 13 years old Written by Gordonfreemanpie57 September 3, CSM over exaggerating again.

There is some blood and you can kill innocent people but there a consequences for you actions in this game. The only thing is some missions taking place in a brothel but NO sex.

I still think it should be for teens since the messages are quite dark such as greed and corruption. This title contains: Positive role models. This review Helped me decide. Had useful details. Read my mind. Report this review.

Teen, 13 years old Written by thatonespymain May 12, Teen, 13 years old Written by Haramboi33 January 8, You're gonna burn, alright. Although it is a simpler and more consumer-friendly rendition, its elements remain the same.

Get this game! Teen, 13 years old Written by medgang May 6, Good story and gameplay Deus Ex: Human Revolution offers a great story and gameplay. You can see a lot of blood if you kill with the takedown moves in the game. Anyway it is a great game play.

Teen, 14 years old Written by Orangemango December 17, Very good game. Game is very well done. Just amazing. Teen, 14 years old Written by EnglishPenguin June 4, Fantastic RPG delivers a hard, moral, and sometimes mature game. REVIEW: content info below The graphics are ok, sometimes tinged too yellow or making the protagonists shoulders appear extremely wide, but who cares when the game in question is so good the only thing you can complain about out the graphics witch are not even that bad.

It ousts the bobble headed cartoony ones and outshines even the more likable RPGs simply because of its difficulty and stealth forced gameplay. There is no such thing as a tank class in this game, this is a stealth RPG, something that is uncommon for the genre.

The gameplay is enjoyable, suspenseful especially on the harder difficulties where several bullets can spell your death. Ammo is rare, almost more so than weaponry, another element that forces a stealthy play style. If you get frustrated easily you may consider over looking this game due to the fact that you most likely will spend hours completing a single objective a major one not minor.

Dues Ex grabs your interest with its unique gameplay, plot, and open world. Language is common ranging from the overlooked "danm" to the jarring F bomb the latter is much less frequent though Violence isn't much of an issue, there is blood but its minimal. If your morally inclined to be non-lethal like me, a paradoxical existence for any action gamer you will be overjoyed that early in the game you are given the option between Lethal or Non-Lethal, though you may be forced to use lethal weaponry because of the lack of ammo, instead of pursuing the more difficult stealthy route.

Sexual content is also an issue, while it is not a major problem, you will encounter some iffy dialogue or outfits never to revealing. The games bad content can be outweighed by its great gameplay, but the decision is up to the parents, I just advise.

Teen, 13 years old Written by 13scarbt October 26, Great game for Teens This is a superb game with a fantastic and engaging plot.

Violence: 6. I'm only giving this 6. There is a hotel that has hot girls dancing around a pole in tight clothing, but nothing too revealing. I would say that a teenager would be able to handle this well though. Several people smoke in the game, but as this is in the future it is not revealed if they are smoking tobacco. In the game people who are augmented with cybernetics rely on a drug called neurophozeyne. If they do not take this drug for a long period of time their body stars to reject the augments, so I guess there is some dependence on drugs.

The stealth game play can be tricky at the start but you get better at it as you progress. Overall rating: 4. The game play style is unique and I loved the RPG elements of it, allowing you to have several outcomes to a situation. Overall there are twelve different endings to the game, meaning there is lots of re playability. But which version should you play? Seven years on, this is still a great immersive sim, and well worth revisiting. The weak link is the writing and story. And the various parallels to contemporary society and culture have all the fi nesse of a drunk gorilla swinging a baseball bat—something Eidos Montreal doubled down on in the next game, Mankind Divided.

That said, the story does provide a few memorable moments. He loves sci-fi, adventure games, taking screenshots, Twin Peaks, weird sims, Alien: Isolation, and anything with a good story.

Andy Kelly. See comments. As a prequel, Human Revolution was able to sidestep the legacy of Invisible War and shrewdly position itself as its antithesis. But this approach also ensured that with time it would be forgotten in the shadow of the original.

Human Revolution even found a narrative excuse to replicate the permanent darkness of the original: Jensen visits Detroit at night, and Hengsha is built on two levels, with the upper occluding most light to the lower. The gameplay likewise largely borrows from the first Deus Ex. Human Revolution is structured around sneaking, talking, shooting, and exploring through complex environments that offer a variety of different approaches for the player to choose from.

Larger levels, like the outstanding Tai Yong Medical infiltration mission, are connected via a couple of hub maps that offer side quests and additional exposition. To some extent this is just part and parcel of the immersive sim genre, but the problem is that Human Revolution is entirely content to leave it that way. There are occasional flashes of genius — the persuasion mini-game, where Jensen must engage in fierce debate with a key character to progress to the next objective, is both entirely original and wholly in keeping with the spirit of Deus Ex — but they are few and far between.

In contrast, Human Revolution is surprisingly bold with its story, world-building, and art direction. This masks its limitations and probably accounts for much of the goodwill around its release.

Human Revolution deftly plays with the expectations set by the fiction.



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