![]() ![]() Completionists can mark the locations of side-quests and item stashes. Stealth-inclined players can draw patrol routes or mark hidden passages. Those who want to go in guns blazing can plan their attack and take note of enemy positions and cover. This isn't a groundbreaking change, but it is nonetheless a huge boon for all types of players. You can even use the stylus to write notes or otherwise mark the map. Instead of a radar that only displays enemies and the direction they face – as was the case in the original Human Revolution – the Director's Cut offers a full 2D map on the GamePad screen that shows enemies and their environment. I played the Wii U version, and the GamePad is incorporated well, for the most part. Those you interact with, be they augmented combat cyborgs or just everyday gun runners in the back alleys of Detroit, feel more human, and the experience is better for it. ![]() These new graphical enhancements make NPC faces in particular pop more than before. Director's Cut also offers several additional features and improvements over the original Human Revolution, not least of which is new lighting and re-worked textures. What's new this time around?Įvery version of the Director's Cut includes the " Missing Link" DLC, which has been incorporated into the main story as opposed to the standalone episode it was upon release. Even so, the addition of second screen features introduce a handful of new, albeit smaller, problems. Now, in 2013, with a "Director's Cut" of Human Revolution available for Wii U, Xbox 360, PS3 and PC, most of its "imperfect" aspects have been smoothed over, improving what was already a great experience. It trusted players to be intelligent and curious, and constructed a bleak, fascinating world that needed to be explored. Two years ago, we called Deus Ex: Human Revolution an "imperfect, complex and ambitious reminder of what a game can be when it's unafraid." Eidos Montreal didn't hold our hands, didn't string us from Waypoint A to Waypoint B so we could kill Bad Guy C. ![]()
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