

John liked Thief while acknowledging its flaws and the anger its deviations from the previous games in the series would cause. It was mainly let down by its controls, which stopped me progressing very far with it, so the chance to play it as a proper, modestly priced PC game is appealing.Įidos Montreal are now working on a new Deus Ex game - or rather, a set of new Deus Ex cross-media experiences, of which a next-gen and PC game is a part.

The similar setting and overlap obviously allows the game to make use of many of the models and textures from Human Revolution, but it also provided some of the same pleasures, as far as conversation systems and stealth and fist-chisels. Although if his middle name is Anglo, I'm twice as excited by it coming to PC. Also, writers should take note: naming a British character Ben Saxon is a little like calling your character Jeff England. You control Ben Saxon, an SAS soldier, and over the course of the game you meet a number of characters that were a part of Adam Jensen's story. The Fall's story set before and alongside the events of Human Revolution. To see this content please enable targeting cookies. Here's an old trailer from before its original release:

It'll be released on Steam for £8, and comes with proper mouse/keyboard support (obviously) and a few other PC-essential features like graphics options and the like. If it was somewhat crappy, why does that matter? When The Fall is all there is of Deus Ex, it matters. That spin-off is now coming to PC on March 25th. It did, however, get a recent, somewhat crappy tablet spin-off called The Fall. It was well liked upon release, but I still feel like it doesn't get enough attention. Before Eidos Montreal tore the internet asunder with their Thief reboot, they made Deus Ex: Human Revolution.
