advertisement
Click Here

Headhunter: Redemption Review

Headhunter: Redemption just isn't a very interesting game, from any angle.

Developer Amuze's original Headhunter game was one of those few, random Dreamcast titles that, despite the handicap of not ever garnering a US release, still managed to attract a decent-sized cult following. Though the game did receive a port-job to the PS2 back in 2002, only now is it being followed up with a proper sequel. Titled Headhunter: Redemption, this Headhunter game once again follows the futuristic adventures of Jack Wade, a grizzled half-cop, half-bounty hunter. Like a lot of action sequels, Redemption conveys a lot of the same ideals and core concepts found in its predecessor and also adds a couple of new factors to the mix, including a second playable character. Unfortunately, the familiar parts of Redemption feel more like archaic retreads than anything else, and Jack's new partner is just about one of the least likable game characters introduced to audiences in quite a long time. Frankly, Redemption just isn't a very interesting game, from any angle.

Headhunter: Redemption takes place a full 20 years after its predecessor. Jack Wade, once a gruff but handsome fellow, has fossilized a bit, sinking further into embitterment and settling into a nice drinking habit to boot. In the game's opening cutscene, we learn that on top of the outbreak of the deadly Bloody Mary virus, which had ravaged the world at the end of the last game, a gigantic earthquake had also managed to wipe out a fair portion of the population. Now, the high rollers of society live in a massive city called Above, which sits above the ruins of the olden society. The world of Below is where the malcontents and dirtbags reside, and it's a half-city, half-penal colony where all of the menial labor that keeps Above running is performed. Think of this place as a mix between the worlds found in the films Demolition Man and Judge Dredd, and you'll have a pretty good idea of what's going on.

During this opening sequence, we're also introduced to a flashback of one of Wade's old assignments, in which he took down a man who was about to murder his young daughter. Moments later, we're back to the present--or the future, or whatever--while Jack is on assignment busting a young woman who had apparently tried to hack into some major corporation's computer system. Of course, this young woman turns out to be none other than the very same girl Jack rescued all those years ago from her murderous father. Though she is now a scofflaw who's working under the moniker of Leeza X, Jack decides to forgo busting her in favor of offering her a chance to become a Headhunter-in-training. Seeing little choice, Leeza joins Wade. She then goes through a brief training sequence, discovers that he is really the man who sent her father to prison, decides she doesn't really care, and then joins Jack in a government-mandated fight against a subversive uprising that is taking shape down in Below. Most of this plays out in the first 20 minutes of the game, and this is about as interesting as the story gets. Once you launch into the actual game, the story kind of degenerates into a generically plotted sci-fi story about rebel forces trying to take down the totalitarian, corporation-driven government of the future, and vice versa. It is, of course, entirely possible to make a plot like this interesting, but as Redemption jumps from one dull, drawn-out, and poorly written cutscene to another, it's quickly apparent that this story is going nowhere.

You spend the bulk of Redemption's early levels playing as Leeza while she learns the ropes about Headhunter life. Eventually you switch over to control Jack Wade, but the game tends to go back and forth a lot after that, and since both characters control almost identically, it doesn't add much variety to the game beyond presenting a different character model to stare at from a third-person view. The basic control mechanics in Redemption are pretty standard for an average third-person shooter. You control your character with the left control stick, and you shift the camera around with the right one. By pressing and holding the right trigger button on the Xbox, or the R1 button on the PS2, you'll put your character into a target mode, where, if an enemy is nearby, a reticle will suddenly appear over that enemy. By tapping the right stick in one direction or another, you can switch between multiple targets, and by pressing the X button on the PS2 or the A button on the Xbox, you'll shoot.

The basic shooting in Headhunter feels fine. None of the weapons are anything particularly special, but each one does feel like it inflicts a satisfying amount of damage for its relative size and firepower. The one kind of obnoxious element early on in the game is that Leeza, since she's a rookie, doesn't have the best sense of aim. So, when you target an enemy, the reticle will kind of jump all over the place, especially on weapons with a lot of recoil. This goes away almost entirely over time, thankfully, but it does make some of the earlier portions of the game more frustrating than they need to be.

Both Leeza and Jack have the ability enter a stealth mode as well. By holding the left trigger button or L2 button, depending on the game version, your character crouches down or will wall-hug if you're close enough to one. When wall hugging, by moving to the edge of the wall, you can peer around to get a bearing on where the nearest attackers are. Then you can jump out from around the corner to begin firing. You can also creep up behind unsuspecting enemies to take them down from behind by using this mode.

The problem with the stealth stuff, though, is that it's both largely unnecessary, and it's also a little broken, at times. It's definitely a good idea in some situations to hang out behind a corner when you've got three or four bad guys wandering about in a hallway ahead of you, but save for these few situations, more often than not you can just run and gun the whole way through. This isn't such a bad thing, since it does tend to make the action more exciting than it would be if you were just creeping around all the time. However, what is not a good thing is how the stealth mode can occasionally hurt you more than help you. Sometimes you'll be creeping along, and all of the sudden you'll get just close enough to a wall to where you'll be sucked into it, which causes the camera to snap about and also causes you to momentarily lose your bearings; this, of course, can sometimes lead to an extra bullet or two to the face that you might not have taken otherwise.

prev

Check Prices: $1.75 – 21.99

advertisement
Click Here

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

Also on

Games you may like…

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

See More Similar Games