
Anyway, Cooper’s unlikely transformation into a pilot kicks off a six-hour campaign where he tries to survive while unraveling the IMC’s secret plans. Let’s just say it’s a good thing they didn’t pick DT, at least as far as the Japanese market goes. During a battle with industrial conglomerate Interstellar Manufacturing Corporation, however, Cooper suddenly finds himself taking over the reigns of a classic Vanguard-class Titan known as BT-7274, or “BT” for short.


You start out as Frontier Militia rifleman Jack Cooper, a young, promising recruit who aspires to become a Titan pilot someday. I say that even as someone who scored the first game highly despite my deep disappointment in its lack of a campaign due to its forward-looking mechanics.Īlthough Titanfall 2’s campaign appears to be the same one-man jaunt through hostile territory that’s seen in many a shooting campaign, this is actually a buddy adventure at its core - pun so totally intended. In addition to being more console agnostic this time around, the sequel also ties a bow around a full-fledged campaign to satisfy folks such as myself who still place great value on story modes for shooters. It’s a problem that Titanfall 2 definitely learns from as it launches on both Microsoft and Sony systems right off the bat. Give 'em hell: Doom (2016) review | Technobubble

Homecoming: Gears of War 4 review | Technobubble Although the game looked like the next big thing for first-person shooters, however, the decision to stay exclusive to one console ecosystem in Xbox, combined with the lack of a campaign, took out some of the luster from the game.īlast from the past: Battlefield 1 review | Technobubble Back in 2014, the first Titanfall game generated plenty of buzz thanks to its faster and more vertical gameplay for soldiers, as well as the addition of giant Titan robots that you can call down from the heavens.
