I know this is coming a fair while after its release, but I just picked up and completed 'Spec Ops: The Line' and absolutely adored it. A game that finally grabs you and points out that this generations trend for generic military shooters isn't a sign of how mature and edgy it is, but a childish power fantasy. When I finished playing I released how strikingly similar this was to DC comics 'Kingdom Come', the comic book that finally denounced the muscle clad 'gritty' dark age of comics.
I don't doubt for a second that we're in gamings 'dark age', a period dominated by teenage power fantasy, pointless 'collectibles' and treasured icons being made more 'hardcore' (poor Bomberman), but does anyone else think (or just hope?) that Spec Ops might the one that leads to more games that think beyond the utter wasteland that shooting games have become?
I don't doubt for a second that we're in gamings 'dark age', a period dominated by teenage power fantasy, pointless 'collectibles' and treasured icons being made more 'hardcore' (poor Bomberman), but does anyone else think (or just hope?) that Spec Ops might the one that leads to more games that think beyond the utter wasteland that shooting games have become?