Once you capture points they become strongholds for your freedom fighters and a base of operations for you to operate out of.
HOMEFRONT THE REVOLUTION PC REVIEW FREE
After a drawn-out tutorial you are finally set free to explore the ruins of Philadelphia to try and capture key strategic points in an effort to take back the city. It’s a very far-fetched and has your typical generic storyline, but it does the trick in terms of setting the scene for a post-apocalyptic Philadelphia. Eventually the US is in a position where they can’t pay back their massive debt to Korea and the Koreans end up pulling the plug on all their technology leaving the US crippled, which leaves the front door open for Korean soldiers to stroll in and make themselves at home on US soil. The premise of the game is that the US has spent decades relying on Korea for most of their imports from technology to even weapons. It’s an interesting combination that makes for a fun game that certainly trumps the first Homefront title. The best way to describe Homefront: The Revolution would be calling it an urban Far Cry with a dash of Freedom Fighters thrown in.
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It takes serious guts to take on the FPS juggernauts out there and that’s why Homefront: The Revolution is ambitious, but sadly ambition alone doesn’t make a game great, and I suspect developers Dambuster Studios had a few problems in getting Homefront: The Revolution out on time. When entering the first-person shooter genre any developer, and publisher, will be well aware that there are so many FPS titles out there with budgets bigger than NASA’s annual spend.