

The Red Zones, where the fighting was heaviest during the initial invasion, are mostly defined by ruined buildings and piles of rubble. While it’s described as an open world, The Revolution’s map is made up of eight separate districts that the main quest drives you through in a decidedly linear order, with few reasons to return to an old one when you’re through. From bombed-out homes to historic landmarks converted into propaganda-covered re-education centers, the authoritarian atmosphere is ever-present.

The backstory of a North Korea-occupied United States is present in every part of developer Dambuster’s version of Philadelphia. Where The Revolution does succeed is in the atmospheric design of its world. There are some genuinely good ideas in Homefront: The Revolution, but nearly every one of them comes with a big fat “but.” While initially engaging, the stealth and shooter gameplay quickly becomes tedious, the story is terrible, and a general lack of polish means Homefront: The Revolution fails to make finishing its 20-hour campaign feel worthwhile. Homefront The Revolution Free Download Unfitgirl For all of its problems, 2011’s Homefront introduced an interesting Red Dawn-like concept, and revisiting post-invasion America in an open-world first-person shooter format sounded promising but this fledgling FPS franchise has let me down again. Homefront The Revolution Free Download Unfitgirl
