Infamous second son good vs evil
If this sounds a lot like the same city mechanics in the previous games, it’s because they are. Or, in turn, you can ignore most of those side missions and just get on with the story, leaving most of Seattle in the hands of the DUP. Your objective is to destroy the DUP’s strongholds and perform a series of side missions to take back regions of the city for the population. Seattle has been taken over by Department of Unified Protection (DUP), the organization tasked with controlling super-powered “bio terrorists” aka “conduits” after the events of the first two inFAMOUS games seven years earlier. The story is driven by a set of missions pulling you through the plot placed throughout the city. The actual game itself is fairly familiar however.
INFAMOUS SECOND SON GOOD VS EVIL FULL
Second Son is a very good looking game, and the developers obviously made full use of the fact that they didn’t need to back develop to less powerful hardware. The move to a more realistic city was likely spurred by the added graphical power of the PlayStation 4. Unlike the cartoon caricatures of cities from the first two games, this feels like a real place and a real city (well, minus one cool looking post-modern library at least). Seattle, the real-life city which serves as the backdrop here, is something of a character itself in the game, which gives the entire experience a more grounded feeling.
Instead, Delsin Rowe is a hipster-garbed mixed-race grunge rebel, who feels at home with his aboriginal tribe in the Pacific North West or on the streets of Seattle. Unlike our original protagonist Cole, the lead character of Second Son isn’t a bro-tastic white guy.
Second Son uses the same template from the first two games, while grounding its setting in a more soundly in the real world. Their protagonist, Cole Macgrath, came off as a bit of a generic sleazy bro character (even if he grows on you a bit), and the games were filled with plenty of rough edges in both gameplay and level design. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.