Earlier this week, Activision released Warzone for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. Warzone is a free-to-play Call of Duty battle royale, similar in structure to popular games of the genre. The gimmick of Warzone is that itâs staggeringly massiveâand that itâs a stealth game, apparently, with many players complaining that the gameâs footsteps are too quiet.
Each round of Warzone drops up to 150 players, broken into 50 three-player teams, into the huge map of Verdanskâa fictional war-torn city with 20-story highrises, an international airport, and a sports stadium. In the first 24 hours, more than six million people started playing. Scroll through social media and youâll find a lot of praise. But thereâs one glaring issue: The footsteps are practically inaudible.
âFootsteps do not seem to register very well,â one player wrote in a popular Reddit thread. âFootsteps are the worst,â replied another. âYou canât fucking hear âem.â Scroll through the rest of the thread and youâll read similar grievances.
When Call of Duty: Modern Warfare came out late last year, one of the chief complaints was about footstep volumeâspecifically, that it was too damn loud. Seeing as Warzone is an add-on to 2019âs Modern Warfare, thereâs a bit of a Goldilocks nature to all of this. It might seem minor, but the issues are valid: If you canât hear footfall in a tense shooter, your rivals can get the drop on you.
The good news is that thereâs a way to amp up the volume of footsteps, at least marginally. Under the audio settings, youâll find seven different options. On Studio Reference (the standard setting) and Dynamic Home Theater, the footstep audio track sounds like John Cageâs â4â33.â Home Theater is a bit better, but you really have to strain to hear any footfalls, especially under the duress of heavy fire.
The mode you want is Boost. It features a moderate dynamic range and neutral equalization, meaning neither the treble nor the bass is overpowering. Plane engines still roar and proximity sounds for gunfire still need fixing. (A faraway gunfight still registers like itâs right next to you.) But, for the most part, Boost gives sound effects like footsteps some much-needed balance.
For reference, I donât have a fancy surround-sound setup (thanks a lot, shoebox Brooklyn apartment) and I always play audio directly out of my TV speakers. If youâre rocking a different setup, your sound experience could be totally different. You can test all of these settings out in-game and switch them on the fly from the menu. As youâre selecting an audio setting, you can push in the right thumbstick to see more details about each setting. From there, you can hit the Square button (on PS4) to hear a sampling.
The developers havenât addressed player complaints yet, so currently using the Boost setting is as good as you can get. Of course, the best way to increase footstep volume in Call of Duty is to close the game and boot up Battlefâ [ducks and runs].
More Call of Duty:
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