What makes Last Light shine isn’t how many things go boom or how many monsters get pumped full of lead.
While the plot itself isn’t terribly original, the world and characters are expanded in the way a good movie sequel grows things not simply for growth’s sake, but to make the player feel even more like they’re in a living, breathing place (or in this case, a barely breathing one, on the brink of death place). It’s up to Artyom, the player character, to learn more about the still-mysterious Dark Ones and try to keep relative peace throughout the metro. In Metro 2033: Last Light (and therefore in Metro: Last Light Redux) the monsters aren’t the only danger, as different factions from Neo-Nazis to Commies and beyond are all duking it out for a doomsday device in a civil war for control of Russia’s remains. Above ground, animals have mutated into horrific beasts, and mysterious psychic beings called the Dark Ones lurk both above ground and below. Russia has been decimated by nuclear war, and the only way people were able to survive was to turn the underground metro system into makeshift settlements. This review will only cover the Last Light Redux half of the package, while you can head over to Jonathan Irwin’s review to see how Metro 2033 Redux turned out (spoiler: it turned out awesome).įor those that weren't aware of Metro: Last Light its first time around, the game is a direct sequel to Metro 2033, with the plot being set forth by the last moments of 2033 (note that while 2033 ends in a choice, Last Light picks one of the endings to use as canon). While the games are only being sold as a package of both titles on consoles, PC players have the option of picking up the pack, or snagging each one up individually. And now, four years after the original Metro 2033 and a year after Metro: Last Light, the Ukrainian developer has released a re-mastered version of both. The combination ended up being a winning one, earning both critical and customer praise. While many games opt to use this as an excuse to let you run around and blow everything up in a testosterone-fueled rampage, 4A Games’ Metro 2033 and Metro: Last Light, based on the novel of the same name by Dmitry Glukhovsky, focus more on the quiet and creepy side of post-nuclear war Russia.
Whether it be via alien invasion, meteor impact, zombie outbreak, or any number of other terrible fates, there’s something about the downfall of civilization and video games that go together like chocolate and peanut butter. I did everything about Benchmark.The post-apocalypse has got to be one of the most used settings in video game history. I hope the game doesn't crash anymore.Įdit: It crashed again. None use SSAA above 0,5x unless they have a monster PC. In-game you can chose - Off, 0.5x, 2x or 4x. You can now run as many tests as you like and do changes to see what result you prefer. Test will start and run as many times you have set in "Run".Īfter tests you will be prompted to open the test page in the html-browser you have set as prefered. Runs: Set it to 1 or 2 = one or two test for evry settings. Can you please look at the image (my benchmark-just below) to check everything is right.īy the way I didn't understand the ''test'' thing. I tried to do what you said on benchmark.
Testresult is saved in Doc-folder/4Agames under folder Metro redux as html files. You can chose to test 1, 2 or 3 times for evry test. Texture to Very High, Blur and Physx off and On in 2 different tests. Turn off SSAA and Tessalation to High or med. Originally posted by Pure & Rustic:Use the benchmark program you find in LL-programfolder.