This week, Eidos released the first downloadable content for their acclaimed role-playing game Deus Ex: Human Revolution, titled The Missing Link. Weâre all looking forward to some more Deus Ex, but is The Missing Link worthy of the brand? Itâs time to ask our guts what they think.
Kirk Hamilton, who has written more about Deus Ex than anyone else at Kotaku: So here we are with a big huge flaming âNoâ at the top of this post and now youâre probably wondering why I hate The Missing Link. But I donât hate it! I just donât recommend paying $15 for it.
The Missing Link picks up near the end of Human Rvolution, with protagonist Adam Jensen stowed away in cryo-sleep aboard a transport ship run by Bell Tower security. In the proper game, Jensen goes into the sleep-tank and then wakes up at his destination, slightly disoriented but ready to kick ass. In the Missing Link, he is discovered mid-trip by the crew and goes on an adventure to uncover and stop a nefarious Bell Tower plot.
Missing Link stands as a separate entity from Human Revolutionâitems gathered in the game donât carry across to your proper save, and all of Adamâs augmentations are stripped away at the very start of the mission. Fortunately, the game gives you a handful of Praxis kits at the outset, which allow you to power up and specialize your character somewhat. The points are limited, however, so you wonât be able to create a godlike uber-Jensen like you may have had in the gameâyouâll have to choose between strength, stealth, etc.
Itâs cool in theoryâone of the shortcomings of Human Revolution was that Jensen could become too versatile, and dealing with each branching situation was more a matter of preference than necessity. Not so in The Missing Link. Especially in the first part of the story, youâll only be able to deal with situations in the ways that your augments allow.
Luke Plunkett, Fellow Human Revolution Fan: Missing Link is yet another disjointed, opportunistic piece of singleplayer downloadable content that drops you back in a story youâve already finished in a world youâve already saved/doomed/whatever. Thereâs just no point to this! Remove the consequences of your actions and the context of your mission and Deus Ex is a very slow and very boring game. Making this a very slow and boring piece of DLC. No.
Okay this sounds pretty good, so why isnât it worth $15? Basically, itâs uninspired. The opening hours are all corridor-sneaking aboard a rain-swept ship, with none of the open-room office desk creeping that was so enjoyable in the first game. It feels like an homage to Metal Gear Solid 2, but in setting only. Itâs flat, the environments are enclosed and constantly reused, and nothing is particularly exciting.
The hallways all look the same, the challenges are the same repetitive mix of computers, laser-grids, patrolling guards and locked doors. The enemiesâ voiceover performances are flat even by Deus Ex standards. And as a result of the closed nature of the story, there are so many possible solutions offered to every problem that things somehow feel false in a way that they never did in Human Revolution, almost like Jensen has been inserted into a Deus Ex simulator.
Most of the guards are carrying pocket secretaries loaded with codes and passwordsâtheyâre much more prevalent than in the main game. Most of the time, Iâd go to hack a keypad only to find that I already had the code. Every room has the requisite alternate entrances, every camera can be bypassed in the same multiple ways. Thereâs just nothing new going onâit feels like more of the same assets and systems from the main game.
I havenât finished The Missing Link, so take this for what it isâa gut check, me answering the question âDo I think you should spend your $15 on this?â As much as I loved Human Revolution, I just canât give this first DLC the same recommendation. As a part of an eventual GOTY collection, sure. If it goes on sale for $5? Sure. But there are better things you could spend your $15 on, especially this time of year.
https://lastchance.cc/deus-ex-human-revolution-the-kotaku-review-5836266%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
You can contact Kirk Hamilton, the author of this post, at [email protected]. You can also find him on Twitter, Facebook, and lurking around our #tips page.