Guild Wars Factions Review

The follow-up to the innovative Guild Wars features a large new fantasy world to explore and enough competitive and cooperative role-playing action to easily keep you busy for weeks.

The Video Review

Greg reviews Guild Wars Factions

The Good

  • Intriguing action RPG gameplay gets your pulse racing but keeps you thinking  
  • Enormous gameworld offers a ton of competitive and cooperative action  
  • Interesting and dynamic new mission types, including frontline alliance battles  
  • Stand-alone game that's substantially enhanced if you own the original  
  • Great presentation and a sleek game engine.

The Bad

  • Despite the multiplayer focus, communicating with other players feels clunky  
  • The most enticing new content caters mostly to the hardcore.

Last year's game that combined most of the best aspects of online role-playing (without any monthly fees attached), action role-playing games, and competitive gaming in general is back in a similarly huge and interestingly complex follow-up. While Guild Wars Factions is inherently similar to its predecessor, and saddled with some of the same relatively minor shortcomings, it still delivers a deep, addictive, and satisfying experience on many levels. The game is ultimately best suited for social, competitive players (like fans of the original), but it effectively weaves together solo, cooperative, and competitive content in a way that's undeniably impressive.

The underlying action in Guild Wars Factions builds on the great formula of the original. You still control a single character who grows to have access to dozens of unique skills (there are hundreds in all), though you can have only eight of them readied at a time--a fairly large number that still forces you to choose very carefully, like the process of building a good deck in a collectible card game. No one character type is unstoppable, as the game is filled with numerous skills designed to disrupt opponents, encouraging you to be an organized team player and also to experiment a lot. If you start off as a role-playing character, you get to proceed through a large story-driven campaign spanning dozens of hours and featuring a practically countless number of missions and side quests. During the course of this campaign, you'll be introduced to many of the gameplay nuances and thrust into some of the cooperative and competitive scenarios on offer. However, it's also possible to go through a good amount of the story stuff with computer-controlled henchmen, though they're pretty stupid and will only end up letting you down in the game's main missions--not that there's a heavy penalty for getting killed. You can't permanently die, though your maximum health and energy decreases each time you die in a combat scenario. If your whole team is wiped out, it's time to magically teleport back to town and consider a different course or strategy.

Guild Wars Factions is a stand-alone game, and it doesn't require you to own the original, though the two games are very much interconnected regardless of whether you own one or both. Whereas the first Guild Wars took place on and around the massive continent of Tyria, Factions introduces the Asian-inspired continent of Cantha. Reminiscent of the setting of last year's Jade Empire, Cantha mashes together various Chinese, Japanese, and other Asian influences into a beautiful but often bleak setting that's a good counterpart to the predominantly Western-medieval Tyria. One of the best parts is that all six of the original character classes from Guild Wars are back in Factions, but the Canthan versions of these characters have distinctively Asian features and clothing. It makes for a greater variety of player characters running around.

Factions also introduces two new character classes, the assassin and the ritualist. Assassins are highly maneuverable and hit quickly and hard, while ritualists have various weird shamanistic spells and may summon numerous different spirits to aid themselves and their allies. Guild Wars veterans will naturally want to try these classes out, but by virtue of the game's meticulous intentions to balance all possible character archetypes, you won't automatically prefer them to your existing characters or the other available classes. You also can't start off in the original Prophecies campaign as one of these new characters if you own the original Guild Wars, though you can work your way up to where they can get to the lands of Tyria by ship--and vice versa if you have existing characters on Tyria.

Basically, Tyria and Cantha are divided by a sea that's as easy to cross as the click of a mouse button, if your character has reached the port and you own the other game. Just like in the original, one of the refreshing things about Guild Wars Factions is that you can basically teleport to any major location you've previously visited in mere seconds. The enormity of the gameworld makes this seem like a necessity, and yet it's possible to cross Cantha on foot, moving from one big region to the next with only brief loading times in between (provided you don't have to download any new content--like in the original, you must be connected to the Internet at all times while playing). In between the two continents lie the Battle Isles, where most of the player-versus-player combat takes place. As in the first Guild Wars, Factions lets you create a high-level PVP-only character at any time, who'll be limited to engaging in competitive matches and won't get to experience the storyline or see much of the world of the game. Still, the PVP combat is where some of the most exciting action is.

The role-playing portion of Guild Wars Factions doesn't have the same epic feel as its predecessor, especially in how it seems to quickly rush you all the way up to the game's maximum character level of 20. The campaign's thinly veiled tutorials and training scenarios are clearly intended to help prepare you for battle against other players, and the story itself--involving a plague causing Cantha's populace to turn into aberrations that look a lot like the Flood from Halo--isn't particularly well told. Apart from some story cutscenes delivered using not-particularly-convincing voice performances, quests are given in little text windows that don't do a great job of drawing you into the plot. And since you're not really earning much in the way of new stuff once you reach the maximum level, the campaign might not hold your interest. However, it's worth pressing through in search of those elite skills and crafted weapons and armor pieces that can give your character an advantage, and some of the campaign missions are a lot of fun. Yet there's a lot more to the game than its campaign.

prev

Check Prices

advertisement

Player Reviews

Critic Scores

*The links above will take you to other Web sites and are provided for your reference. GameSpot does not produce or endorse the content on these sites.

advertisement
Click Here

Game Stats

Games you may like…

Users who looked at content for this game also looked at these games.

See More Similar Games