What is it? A direct sequel to Modern Warfare 2
Release date November 10, 2023
Expect to pay $70/£65
Developer Sledgehammer Games, Treyarch
Publisher Activision Blizzard
Reviewed on GeForce RTX 2080 Super, Core i9 9900KS, 32GB RAM
Steam Deck Unsupported
Link Official site
Rain or shine, the Call of Duty must flow. It's a mantra that's served Activision well for 20 years as Call of Duty grew from yet another WW2 shooter to the best-selling franchise of all time. For 18 of those years the series has maintained a streak of annual releases, regularly shattering previous records with only the occasional bump in the road when a less-good, but still fun entry came along.
Modern Warfare 3 is bigger than a bump—it's an indictment of the Call of Duty machine, a rushed product created to fill a $70 gap in Activision's calendar and sold as something (reports suggest) it was never meant to be. Let's not mince words: this is an expansion in everything but name and price. But even if it were more substantial, I'm not convinced that Modern Warfare 3 would be satisfying. Despite riding the coattails of last year's excellent Modern Warfare 2, catering to potent 2009 nostalgia, and bringing welcome improvements to Gunsmith, many of Sledgehammer Games' original contributions come off as superfluous, or simply not as good as what we had before.
This is a series low point. It's the first time that CoD's $70 barrier to entry has felt like an insult to longtime players, and yet, the series' live service model means fans who want to participate in Call of Duty's events and battle passes for the next year have no alternative. Outside of Warzone, Modern Warfare 3 is where the Call of Duty action will be throughout 2024, for better and worse.
The
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