Bandai Namco Dominic Tarason Fighting Action UPS FIVE shooting social fun Bandai Namco Dominic Tarason

Synduality Echo of Ada review

pcgamer.com

Synduality Echo of Ada is one of those games that feels custom-made for me. A third-person mech action game that takes the extraction shooter formula and twists it into something more social and accessible, with an unusual structure hiding a wealth of optional story tied into a recent anime series.

It aims high, but an interesting concept can only take you so far, and the end results here feels like three half-finished games stapled together.

I had pockets of fun with Synduality. Of the 20-plus hours I’ve clocked so far, the first 15 were a compelling journey of discovery.

From choosing and customizing my first Magus (the android co-pilot that provides constant chatter and guidance in and out of the mech cockpit), to my first tentative forays into the post-apocalyptic wastes, to scavenging enough work gloves to clean the weeds out of my doer-upper mech hangar, all the way to my first (accidental) PvP encounters in the field, I thought it was all building to something.

But Synduality never gets better than its opening hours. What is it? A mech-based extraction shooter and mid-tier anime tie-in Release date: January 23, 2025 Expect to pay: £35 / $40 up to £85 / $100 Developer: Game Studio Inc. Publisher: Bandai Namco Entertainment Reviewed on: Windows 11, i9-13900k, Nvidia RTX 4090, 64GB DDR5 RAM Steam Deck: Unsupported Multiplayer?: Yes Link: Official site Synduality is (at least initially) an extraction shooter, inspired by the likes of Escape From Tarkov, but in lightweight mechs that remind me a bit of Hawken’s twitchy yet streamlined rumbling robots.

Все новости дня

This page might use cookies if your analytics vendor requires them.