Just when we thought weād seen all there is to see in the world of J.R.R. Tolkienās Lord of the Rings saga, Snowblind Studios goes and writes an entirely new adventure, chronicling the goings on in the North while Sauronās eye was focused on Frodo and friends. Should you lend it your bow, or give it the axe?
Michael Fahey, who is cool on Tolkien but hot on action role-playing games: When Snowblind Studios and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment announced The Lord of the Rings: War in the North was in development, the action role-playing aficionado in me squealed like a little girl getting a new pony. Nothing gets me going like a good old hack-and-slash action RPG, and having developer Baldurās Gate: Dark Alliance and both Champions of Norrath titles for the PlayStation 2, Snowblind had established itself as the action RPG developer to beat.
That doesnāt mean I wasnāt worried about the game. The team hadnāt done anything in the genre since the forgettable Justice League Heroes back in 2006, and The Lord of the Rings series has induced more sleep in me than hours of enjoyment. I developed an idea of what I wanted The War in the North to be in my head, certain Snowblind would miss the mark.
Four hours into the game and Iāve been pleasantly surprised. The combat is satisfyingly tight, each swing of the sword, staff, or axe feeling as if itās falling on a foe rather than floating in their general direction. Gaining experience levels and filling out each characterās talent tree is satisfying without being over-complicated. The character models look much better in-game than they did in screens and trailers, and equipping new armor and items changes the look of each character, something much more important to me than it should be. The online cooperative multiplayer for up to three players has performed flawlessly so far, and while there isnāt much enemy variety itās still fun to kill the ones weāre given.
It might not excel, but I wasnāt looking for excellence; just competent, quality action RPG entertainment, and The Lord of the Rings: War in the North has given me that. Yes.
Luke Plunkett, the closest thing Kotaku has to a New Zealand film director: From everything Iāve seen and heard, you need to be a Lord of the Rings fan to get the most out of this game. What it does as an action RPG isā¦tick the boxes. Itās fairly ho-hum, you run around, you kill things, you occasionally kill something bigger. At this time of the year, with so many truly blockbuster games vying for your time and attention, I normally wouldnāt recommend it.
But Iām not normal. Iām a massive Lord of the Rings fan, and the way this game looks like it stepped right out of an unreleased fourth film, while at the same time blending into the established fiction of the universe, is really attractive to me. Iāll put up with the doldrums of loot and slashing if there are Tolkien-ish dwarves and giant eagles, and hey, this game has dwarves and giant eagles. That makes it a Yes.
Kirk Hamilton, who has considered buying the Sting replica from SkyMall: The thing about Lord of the Rings: War in the North is that itās just basically unappealing. The LOTR brand is feeling tired, particularly in the face of Game of Thrones. The gameās main story is by definition a side-story, since it has been spun entirely from a vague reference in Tolkienās āmainā series. The characters themselves are Boringville, USA: the gruff(ish) dwarf, the female elven magic user, the constipated-sounding human ranger. The environments are brown and repetitive, and combat is enjoyable enough but kinda mobby.
Iāve only played a couple hours of War in the North, but judging by what Iāve seenāfrom the halting dialogue system to the repetitive action sequencesāthis game isnāt on the same level as its competition. Its integrated co-op might make things more fun (I havenāt gotten to play yet), but even if that feature is spectacular, War in the North would feel flat and charmless. No.
Gut Check is an off-the-cuff impression of what we think of a game: what weād tell a friend; how weād respond on Twitter or Facebook or over a beer if someone asked us āWould you buy this game?ā