XBOX Previews
Far Cry 3 Preview
“Third time’s a charm” is a phrase that sort of implies the first two times didn’t take. When the first two times were good and better, you’re going to be hard-pressed to pull off a “best” – anything else would be a letdown. After seeing the demo of Far-Cry 3 shown at E3 2011, I’d wager better than even money that the franchise is charmed indeed.
Far Cry 3 returns you to the tropics, where you’ll step into the boots of protagonist Jason Brody, a man with a busted boat, a missing girlfriend, and, as of this moment, a lot of unanswered questions about his identity. Stranded on an archipelago (that’s a chain of islands for those of you who flunked sixth-grade geography, which implies that you’ll be able to travel between them), it’ll be your goal to rescue the damsel and make your escape, hopefully while retaining some of your sanity.
The preview shown at E3 seems to confirm this. The first few minutes of the game have you taken hostage by a clearly…unstable guerrilla named Vaas , who delivers a rambling (not to mention well-acted and well-animated) monologue before kicking you off a cliff with a cinder block tied to your boots. Narrowly escaping a watery grave, you burst through an encampment of bandana-wearing, AK-toting thugs to steal their Blackhawk – only to be taken down by an RPG, putting you right back in Vaas’s psychotic hands. Of course, the, but everything, everything – from the lush foliage that looks like it’s blooming, to the detailed stealth attacks (jumping from a six-foot ledge onto someone’s chest, knife first – very effective), to Vaas’s creepy vascillation between thousand-yard stare and bug-eyed freakout – looks amazing.
There’s a lot of things that can go wrong, any number of ways that this could turn out cheesy, frustrating, restrictive, or just plain confusing. Still, I’ll admit to feeling a little chill crawl down my spine every time Vaas asks me if I know the definition of insanity. By the time Far-Cry 3 is over, I have a feeling I’ll be well-acquainted – maybe even too well.