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"Hitman: Episode 1"

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Wed 27/04/16 at 10:43
Moderator
"possibly impossible"
Posts: 24,985
Episodic Hitman? It seemed Square Enix were on something when they thought that one up, but, having played Episode 1 of their latest game featuring the bald-headed one, they may have got it just right.

Hitman relies on multiple replays to solve its missions. It’s not compulsory, of course, and given a certain amount of skill or luck you can finish the 2 tutorial missions and the Paris level included in this first ‘episode’ in one play-through. What the game does, though, is give you options and rewards for using different methods to off your target and the beauty is in trying these out.

Some of these tasks, or Opportunities, as they’re known in-game, are given to you before the mission starts and others reveal themselves through overheard conversations as you eavesdrop on guards or through opportunities that arise as you wonder around in disguise. Poisoning food or drinks can buy you time or lead you to a less conspicuous location free from unwanted attention. Other methods involve close quarters weapons and even an ejector seat. Of course, you also have to leave the scene without raising suspicion.

The tutorial levels are ideal for taking beginners through the basic methods of assassination and also giving a bit more of a challenge to more advanced players, immediately presenting them with further options. I actually enjoyed these smaller maps as much as the full level Paris map, they’re so full of detail and there are just as many ways to go back and kill your target.

As much fun as I had working out how to off the next target, it’s the hiding in plain sight that got me every time. There’s something rather thrilling about waltzing past security because you’re dressed as a waiter or the tense feeling of being watched by certain types of enemy who can see through your disguise as you try to avoid their regular patterns of movement.

Yes, there are a few glitches here and there, some of the enemy AI chase you one minute and then completely loose interest as you round a corner, but for a large world full of characters going about their business who generally react to your less than subtle approach to murder, Hitman is as impressive as it is complex. Take the approach to your accidental unveiling by being in the wrong place at the wrong time (or standing over an obviously dead body). Guards will be alerted in the area where you were last spotted but will take their time to spread the word. You can literally hear them running around try to inform others of the horrendous event while you saunter down another set of stairs on the other side of the building, still wearing the same disguise you were spotted in. Sometimes it can feel like you got away far too easy and other times you get caught out just as you think you might have made it past the last set of security.

Rounding this off is ‘Contracts’, a mode that allows you or anyone else to specify an NPC as a target, then sets a series of rules that you’ll need to follow to kill them. In some ways this is a tighter game than the more open main mission and forms an interesting alternative. Being player assigned, there’s the potential for plenty of new targets or ways to kill them.

It’s worth noting that loading times are a pain here, even for a game in smaller parts. Thankfully there are liberal save slots available and you can save your game at any time. It’s one of the few complaints in a game that joyfully explores many ways to kill a single target.

IO Interactive have certainly listened to Hitman’s fans and brought back several highlights from previous games. It’s clear, even from this first level and the tutorials, that this has turned out to be one of the best games in the franchise and while we wait for the inevitable next chapter to arrive there are plenty of opportunities to explore the maps and methods of assassination. That said, part 2 can’t come soon enough.

9/10
Wed 27/04/16 at 14:03
Moderator
"possibly impossible"
Posts: 24,985
dav2612 wrote:
I don't think you have too long to wait for part 2 since I'm sure the PS Blog says it is out now.

It is. Italy this time around. Will have to try and play it tonight if I get time.
Wed 27/04/16 at 11:04
Regular
"And in last place.."
Posts: 2,054
I don't think you have too long to wait for part 2 since I'm sure the PS Blog says it is out now.
Wed 27/04/16 at 10:43
Moderator
"possibly impossible"
Posts: 24,985
Episodic Hitman? It seemed Square Enix were on something when they thought that one up, but, having played Episode 1 of their latest game featuring the bald-headed one, they may have got it just right.

Hitman relies on multiple replays to solve its missions. It’s not compulsory, of course, and given a certain amount of skill or luck you can finish the 2 tutorial missions and the Paris level included in this first ‘episode’ in one play-through. What the game does, though, is give you options and rewards for using different methods to off your target and the beauty is in trying these out.

Some of these tasks, or Opportunities, as they’re known in-game, are given to you before the mission starts and others reveal themselves through overheard conversations as you eavesdrop on guards or through opportunities that arise as you wonder around in disguise. Poisoning food or drinks can buy you time or lead you to a less conspicuous location free from unwanted attention. Other methods involve close quarters weapons and even an ejector seat. Of course, you also have to leave the scene without raising suspicion.

The tutorial levels are ideal for taking beginners through the basic methods of assassination and also giving a bit more of a challenge to more advanced players, immediately presenting them with further options. I actually enjoyed these smaller maps as much as the full level Paris map, they’re so full of detail and there are just as many ways to go back and kill your target.

As much fun as I had working out how to off the next target, it’s the hiding in plain sight that got me every time. There’s something rather thrilling about waltzing past security because you’re dressed as a waiter or the tense feeling of being watched by certain types of enemy who can see through your disguise as you try to avoid their regular patterns of movement.

Yes, there are a few glitches here and there, some of the enemy AI chase you one minute and then completely loose interest as you round a corner, but for a large world full of characters going about their business who generally react to your less than subtle approach to murder, Hitman is as impressive as it is complex. Take the approach to your accidental unveiling by being in the wrong place at the wrong time (or standing over an obviously dead body). Guards will be alerted in the area where you were last spotted but will take their time to spread the word. You can literally hear them running around try to inform others of the horrendous event while you saunter down another set of stairs on the other side of the building, still wearing the same disguise you were spotted in. Sometimes it can feel like you got away far too easy and other times you get caught out just as you think you might have made it past the last set of security.

Rounding this off is ‘Contracts’, a mode that allows you or anyone else to specify an NPC as a target, then sets a series of rules that you’ll need to follow to kill them. In some ways this is a tighter game than the more open main mission and forms an interesting alternative. Being player assigned, there’s the potential for plenty of new targets or ways to kill them.

It’s worth noting that loading times are a pain here, even for a game in smaller parts. Thankfully there are liberal save slots available and you can save your game at any time. It’s one of the few complaints in a game that joyfully explores many ways to kill a single target.

IO Interactive have certainly listened to Hitman’s fans and brought back several highlights from previous games. It’s clear, even from this first level and the tutorials, that this has turned out to be one of the best games in the franchise and while we wait for the inevitable next chapter to arrive there are plenty of opportunities to explore the maps and methods of assassination. That said, part 2 can’t come soon enough.

9/10

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