

Moreover, there's tons of things going on in the world: uruks hunting in the forest, orcs drinking and partying on their inmense fortresses, slaves revolting on a campament, and a large list of etc. He can jump and climb through almost everything, and the two big countries you visit, while not as big as other open-world games like Skyrim, do fine in giving you this sense of a huge world that will be difficult to fully explore. Talion does exactly what you want in the very moment you press the key, without delays. The keyboard+mouse is extremely easy to use and ultra responsive. Never felt so good fighting on a PC videogame. A few themes are particularly pleasant to listen to, while others go unnoticed, but all do just fine accompanying their respective scenes. The music is overall good and LOTR style. Be sure to download the 10Gb Ultra Graphics free patch and equip yourself with a good graphic card to experience the whole thing.

Because, honestly, these orcs are VERY alive. High quality shaders, textures, perfect movement animations that make your combats worthy of an action movie, and great facial expressions that increases the immersion and the feeling that the characters are alive. But now to more serious issues: The graphics of the game are absolutely amazing, in every single sense. The game also had it's flaws: no epic LOTR huge war-battles, little character customization, little diversity of environments, and orcs, uruks and more orcs to battle (I wanted to slash some humans too!). It met my expectations, and I literaly had to force myself to stop playing through the day, since the fun made too often me lose time perception. And I was very hyped to put my hands in Shadow of Mordor since I saw the first trailers almost a year ago.
#MIDDLE EARTH SHADOW OF MORDOR 3 MOVIE#
And I was very hyped to put my hands in Shadow of Mordor First, I was very eager to play a game of LOTR after the last movie of the Hobbit. First, I was very eager to play a game of LOTR after the last movie of the Hobbit.
