holoz0r's A-Z of Steam: Deus Ex - A Superb Classic - A game that keeps getting better - especially with the Revision mod

in Hive Gaming5 years ago

An enormous world. A rich tapestry of conspiracy. Labyrinth-like levels that give you the freedom to rush in all guns blazing, sneak past foes, or silently assasinate them. Incredibly deep role playing mechanics, and enormous scope that ensures that you can only specialise in certain ways on a single play through.

The premise:

The year is 2052 and the world is a dangerous and chaotic place. Terrorists operate openly - killing thousands; drugs, disease and pollution kill even more. The world's economies are close to collapse and the gap between the insanely wealthy and the desperately poor grows ever wider.

All the screenshots from this review are from the Mod's Steam Store page.

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This is Deus Ex, one of the best games ever made, and an absolute pleasure to revisit, with the help of the Deus Ex: Revision mod, which is available on Steam; and makes ot ever so easy to get the classic game up and running on modern hardware.

No dodgy patches, no disabling hyper-threading, SMT, or forcing your monitor to run at an exotic resolution. It just works.

It is beautiful. Yes, its an old, dated game, but it is still beautiful for its dystopian illustration of a society fraying at its seam, exploring the inefficiency of bureaucracy, the power structures that make up the world's political, logistical, and financial systems - and all sorts of conspiracy theories.

You'll see references to the Illuminati, Area 51,and other common popular theories along the way - and the game manages to coherently blend these all into a globe trotting and entertaining narrative.

At the original time of release, Deus Ex required a beast to run well, utilising the Unreal engine (the first one!) - and I remember playing this on a woefully under specced machine - which only served to increase the difficulty of the game, which remains well balanced (although leans more to the side of "unforgiving" than most games would consider these days) - given the fact that depending on your difficulty level, this limited the number of times that you could save the game.

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The other thing to mention about this game is just how large and filled with detail every single level is - whether its computer terminals and coffee cups in an office, or trash, bottles of booze and bicycles in alleyways - the world is littered with an extraordinary amount of detail, with most of it interactive.

When you're not untangling the narrative, you can play pool in a bar. You can buy stuff from vending machines. You can take illicit drugs, and be impaired by them. There's no limit to the freedoms and liberties that Deus Ex provides to you.

Want to do objectives out of order? Sure! Early in the game, I went and stopped the terrorists from bombing a subway station before going off to do the main objective. This sub-task, the quest giver tells me, was the next challenge after the primary, but since its already done, time to go back to base.

Sneak. Shoot. Try notice what has changed thanks to nostalgia, and what the mod developers have done to try and modernise the game.

The AI is still challenging. The controls are still all there (but require some tweaking). The story, the themes, are all so very relevant, especially given the fact that the game describes a world suffering from a virus - and that alone gives it an outstanding modern context.

If you're looking for something to do, and you like PC games - and... you've never played the original Deus Ex, you now immediately have something to do for the next 20-40 hours. This game will change your life. It will change the way you look at every modern video game, and you'll realise the best computer games ever made are behind us, not in front of us.

This is a true title from the golden age of gaming, and is required for anyone who wants to slap the label of gamer upon their identity.

Truly superb.

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I remember really looking forward to this game and playing it for a few weeks straight then somehow completely forgetting about it shortly after. :-D

Good time as ever to play it! :D

I've got so many games in my Steam Collection that are the same - I am an avid Civilization fan - I got Civ 6 on release day - and still haven't put any significant amount of time into it. It'll be a while before I get to it, if I keep playing games in alphabetical order, which I really want to do - its the only way I'll get through them all.

I'm dreading the "Fs", I've got pretty much every Final Fantasy game - and there's a lot of them! :D


This post was shared in the Curation Collective Discord community for curators, and upvoted and reblogged by the @c-squared community account after manual review.
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Gaming galore, love it, found this cornucopia of content through @galenkp - ah Deus Ex, I played the later games last year on XB, a fun game yet not as engagingby any means, and like DA, etc dumbed down for the masses. The first Deus i played was at Uni, 2001 i think, what a game hacking, stealth hiding in bins, drones i think, it was a longtome ago and it was Uni, thanks for the memories.

No worries, happy to help tweak that nostalgia nerve!