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Kevin Spacey to star in Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare | Kevin Spacey to star in Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare |
(4 months later) | |
Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more. Except, of course, this being Call of Duty, the breach is likely to see plenty more action in the coming years. | Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more. Except, of course, this being Call of Duty, the breach is likely to see plenty more action in the coming years. |
Yes, Activision has announced the 2014 instalment in its annual first-person shooter series. Subtitled Advanced Warfare, the game is due out on 4 November, and will be developed by San Francisco-based studio Sledgehammer, which previously worked on Modern Warfare 3. And the Shakespearean reference in the opening line is not merely a flourish: the game will feature Kevin Spacey, artistic director of the Old Vic, as its lead antagonist. It is not the respected actor's first video game appearance – he also starred in the Xbox 360 and PlayStation 2 tie-in with the movie Superman Returns. | |
Set, it seems, slightly in the future, Advanced Warfare will feature Spacey as the head of a private military contractor (PMC) which goes rogue and picks a fight with the US government – with no doubt explosive consequences. | Set, it seems, slightly in the future, Advanced Warfare will feature Spacey as the head of a private military contractor (PMC) which goes rogue and picks a fight with the US government – with no doubt explosive consequences. |
From the trailer it looks like the game, which has dramatic set pieces on San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, has an emphasis on bleeding-edge military hardware. Soldiers wear exoskeletons which provide extra armour and enhanced physical abilities – including the ability to rocket jump and scale vertical surfaces. A little like recently released Xbox One shooter, Titanfall. Cloaking devices, robotic tanks, portable cover points and drones also make appearences amid the gunfire and explosions. | From the trailer it looks like the game, which has dramatic set pieces on San Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, has an emphasis on bleeding-edge military hardware. Soldiers wear exoskeletons which provide extra armour and enhanced physical abilities – including the ability to rocket jump and scale vertical surfaces. A little like recently released Xbox One shooter, Titanfall. Cloaking devices, robotic tanks, portable cover points and drones also make appearences amid the gunfire and explosions. |
Originally Activision intended to dripfeed the news of its next blockbuster via snippets of information. On Thursday it announced a teaser site, and a date for a fuller revelation: 4 May. It also released a mini-documentary on real-life PMCs and their role in military situations across the world. | Originally Activision intended to dripfeed the news of its next blockbuster via snippets of information. On Thursday it announced a teaser site, and a date for a fuller revelation: 4 May. It also released a mini-documentary on real-life PMCs and their role in military situations across the world. |
However, it seems details of the announcement were leaked during the night, and so Activision has launched a trailer and release date early. US news site Polygon has suggested that the PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC will be the key platforms for the title. | However, it seems details of the announcement were leaked during the night, and so Activision has launched a trailer and release date early. US news site Polygon has suggested that the PlayStation 4, Xbox One and PC will be the key platforms for the title. |
The Call of Duty series has sold over 100m copies since the first title arrived in 2003. The games reached their peak of popularity with Call of Duty: Black Ops II in 2012, which shifted over 7.5m copies on its launch day and reached $1bn in revenue after just two weeks. Last year's title, Call of Duty: Ghosts fared less well, although has still sold almost 20m copies, making it the biggest selling titles of 2013 after Grand Theft Auto V. | |
According to Activision, Call of Duty has around 40m active players, although some have criticised the series for its glorification of military action, gung-ho patriotism, cultural stereotyping and derivative campaign narratives. It is thought that Sledgehammer is keen to make a clean break with this title, introducing new ideas and innovations – although that was very much the aim with Black Ops II (which introduced strategy sequences) and Ghosts (which introduced a combat dog). | According to Activision, Call of Duty has around 40m active players, although some have criticised the series for its glorification of military action, gung-ho patriotism, cultural stereotyping and derivative campaign narratives. It is thought that Sledgehammer is keen to make a clean break with this title, introducing new ideas and innovations – although that was very much the aim with Black Ops II (which introduced strategy sequences) and Ghosts (which introduced a combat dog). |
Activision is still expected to announce further details on Sunday at 4pm UK time. | Activision is still expected to announce further details on Sunday at 4pm UK time. |
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