Kane & Lynch 2 Dog Days Review
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You're running starkers through a city, your skin cut to pieces, a gun in your hand. Your buddy is also naked and bleeding from numerous wounds all over his body. This is the crazy life of Kane and Lynch, gaming's most unlikable leading men; psychos who just can't stay out of trouble. With the original game failing to be a critical success, developer IO Interactive's sequel has a lot to prove. Are these guys simply blood-thirsty killers or is there more to them?
Without spoiling the plot of this sequel too much, Kane and Lynch bodge a job, resulting in the death of someone with connections to a huge criminal organisation in Shanghai. With an army of goons out for blood what follows is an often unpleasant tale of revenge, torture, murder and the ramblings of a psycho and his mate. This time around you play as Lynch, although the slightly less unhinged, but still more or less a psycho, Kane is always at your side.
Dog Days is, at its core, a fairly simplistic cover-based third-person shooter. You can now hide behind objects by pressing a button, rather than the awkward auto cover system the original game employed, and the controls feel tighter too. Environments this time around have been designed to allow for better use of these basic mechanics; you're never far from a handy waist-high crate or wall to take shelter behind, but be careful, as some cover will be ripped apart by enemy gun-fire.
With enemies dropping guns and ammo all over the place, and a plentiful supply of explosive canisters and crates, you're never short of ways to dispose of foes. As is often the way, the shotgun (in various forms) was my weapon of choice, but the sniper rifle and various automatic weapons came in very useful too. At one point you even get to man a gun turret inside an army helicopter, in what is one of the game's most action packed sequences.
The duo's fairly brief murderous adventure is unquestionably full of intense shoot-outs, but memorable moments are few and far between. The naked scene alluded to at the start doesn't deliver anything new in terms of gameplay, but the events were shocking enough to make me feel a bit uneasy. Equally, a level set inside an office block under attack from a gunship is full of things being shot to pieces, but it still somehow lacks spectacle.
Dingy levels merge into one rather depressing whole, with the various Shanghai environments doing little to sell the Chinese city as a hot tourist destination. This if of course exactly what IO wanted to achieve with Dog Days' visuals. Combined with an excellent shaky cam and internet video-style pixelation, no other game has ever looked so deliberately miserable while simultaneously being Michael Mann cool.
Audio work is equally impressive, with the excellent voice acting paired superbly with ambient sounds from the city. Fire fights send bullets ricocheting through your surround sound speakers, while our heroes constantly bicker with each other. The lip synching could certainly have been better, but on the whole the performances of each virtual actor make a basic story very entertaining, and one you'll want to see through to its conclusion.




User Comments
Highwayman
How they hell this site rated graphics 9/10? have they never seen a game fromt he last 5 years outside of a console?
mikejosh1978
scaz2244
clangod
Generic-Username
rbevanx
Bit gutted really but I now get what you getting at from your comment on the "videogamer plays"
Quote:
Yeah I agree very annoying especially when you are trying to get into the first one right at the start and trying to get out of the diner, when you keep getting stuck all the time.
From playing the demo and having completed the first one I do still feel the first one seems to be better.
Simply because I felt from playing the demo it was a bit bland and the new areas offered very little that I felt was different from the last area I was just in.
But the first one kept changing levels nicely like you start off trying to escape the cops from, then to a bank heist followed by a chase, then a Tokyo nightclub. This new one just feel a one way street with the only things that change are the florescent lights rather than a totally different environment.
To me they have fixed one area (the controls) but totally forgot about another main point of a game (the levels)
But my God the multiplayer sounds awesome for the second one!!!!
robz48
El-Dev