Marcus had finally reached the computer where he could access his criminal record. Having snuck through a building and silently disposed of multiple guards using his home-brewed, non-lethal arsenal, here it was. A young African American man, Marcus had been flagged, profiled by the system for a crime he didn't commit. I, the player, am given control to delete his record, and replace Marcus' striking features with a pudgy, deer-in-headlights white guy.
Later, Marcus gets drunk at the beach and throws his phone in the water.
Watch Dogs 2 is a big, fun, AAA experience that feels, after five hours of play, as much a step forward for the series as Assassin's Creed 2 was to the original. But it's also surprisingly anarchic, shot though with anti-establishment sensibilities and a sense of very real paranoia around the way our data is being wickedly manipulated in the modern world. Watch Dogs 2 is a blast to play, but it also wants you to get angry.
from IGN Video Games http://ift.tt/2dPwSd3
via IFTTT
No comments:
Post a Comment