
Although more time and effort went into the Marine campaign, it’s the Xenomorph’s story that is the most interesting, and the Alien’s unique cat-and-mouse gameplay that is the most satisfying. More in an imbalanced, glitchy, totally unfair way.īy far the standout campaign is the Alien one. The final boss battle is also one of the most horrific I’ve encountered in a long time, and not in a good way. Even though a Predator can easily take out an Alien in the multiplayer, the bugs take too heavy a beating and spray too much acid to be anything more than an abject pain to fight. His projectile weapons are quick to die and not really effective against the fast-moving Aliens, and players often need to resort to fisticuffs. The hunter species does well against Marines, who are fun to distract and decapitate at will, but against Xenomorphs he is next to hopeless, and he’ll be fighting Xenomorphs often. The Predator is by far the weakest of the three campaigns, not least for the fact that you never really feel like the badass you should. Still, the game eases up in the latter chapters, and overall the Marine campaign is tightly scripted, atmospheric, and even features a few cool boss battles. Deaths regularly come out of nowhere, and often the game will strip you of ammunition or weapons, forcing you to use a standard pistol that is completely incapable of dealing with even a single Xenomorph. This lends itself well to creating a tense and terrifying game, but sometimes feels very frustrating and cheap. As a human, the Marine known only as “Rookie” is the physically weakest of the three species, and even the most common of drones are capable of killing him. The Marine campaign is more survival horror than straight shooter. Still, each campaign has its share of quality moments, and the different play styles help to make them feel unique. In fairness, the idea comes off as exactly what it is - a none-too-subtle excuse to re-use environments for each campaign. The allegedly overlapping story doesn’t really come through and could have been handled much better. The three single-player campaigns all take place around the same time and work together to tell a complete story. The basic premise involves a colony on the planet of BG-36, owned by the omnipresent Weyland-Yutani Corporation. We have three single-player campaigns, revolving around the Marine, the Alien and the Predator, in addition to a Survival mode and plenty of multiplayer match types.

Predator is fragmented into an impressively large amount of game modes. Now all we need is a deck of cards.Īliens vs. It’s clever and varied, scary and intense, yet by equal strokes it’s confused, slapdash and, at its worst, undeniably broken. Predator, like the intergalactic creatures it stars, is about as mixed a bag as you can muster.

However, like most things in life, having the tools and putting those tools to good use are two entirely different things.Īliens vs.

Predator for the current generation has all the tools for greatness. Armed with better graphics, tighter controls and more gore than you can shake a stick at, Aliens vs. Rebellion have a long history with the franchise, and their previous AvP games are critically acclaimed. As a huge fan of the Aliens franchise, I’ve been excited about Aliens vs. If there is any game that’s guaranteed to make me excited, it’s a game involving Xenomorphs.
