Global Agenda review

Even with jetpacks, can this hybrid sci-fi shooter grab the right audience?

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Okay, enough of the dry mechanics stuff: here's what you want to know. Global Agenda is a fantastic game at its core. There's the problem, though, that getting to that core isn't easy. Initially, the game appears to be very user-friendly, as it offers a really cool tutorial mission that feels way more like a single-player game than your typical MMO. It does a great job of teaching you the most basic mechanics (like the awesome jetpack that everyone gets). However, once you finish the tutorial, it just tosses you into the greater game without remotely enough of what you need to know to avoid frustration.


Above: These rookies are about to learn the hard way that this boss has a vicious knockback attack

It doesn't clearly explain that you can reassign skill points and equipment at no penalty. It doesn't make it obvious that buying armor doesn't actually make you stronger (it just looks cool). It basically holds your hand for the first few minutes, and then drops you into the ocean. Everything is either poorly explained, or not explained at all. So unless a new player checks out the forums and reads FAQs or asks other players questions, many may be turned off before they get to the fun.

The other hurdle Global Agenda has to leap is its weird genre niche it's carved out. Since it floats between shooter, RPG, and MMO, people who want a really pure shooter experience might be turned off, and people who want a typical MMORPG where you just grind, and whereand level trumps skill, might also be unhappy. It's too bad, because anyone who likes shooters or RPGs, and comes to GA with an open mind, might just have their horizons expanded.

Another aspect that may appeal or annoy is that the game demands teamwork. There is no soloing whatsoever: you can't enter any mission alone (for PvE, missions involve four players). Also, your success is utterly dependent on the competence of your teammates. In PvE missions, the only way to earn money is if your team members die a combined total of less than four times. So all you need is one idiot in your group that dies four times and you get no money for the mission (this happened to us constantly at the Medium difficulty mission level). Luckily, money is mostly superfluous – you don't need it for anything that affects your character's power. You'll also still earn experience in both PvE and PvP regardless of whether your teammates suck.


Above: Alternatively, these guys could flank their opponents and jetpack up to the high ground to even the odds

The upside to the enforced teamwork is that we've never seen randoms play together so well. Medics heal you constantly, Robotics characters protect you with shields, and everyone sticks together. This all works without anyone using voice, and most people don't use it (outside of Conquest), although the game has built-in voice support.

We haven't talked about the Conquest mode yet because it requires a subscription. Everything we've mentioned above doesn't require a subscription. The regular game provides plenty of ways to maintain the fun for quite a while – we're going to keep playing it after this review, which says a lot. We're hoping the non-subscription part of the game gets continuing support, especially with new content, but with the ability to quickly level up all four classes – Assault, Medic, Recon, and Robotics, we won't be bored anytime soon.

Still, for those who want something more, the Conquest mode is available. You have to join an Agency (read: Guild) to take part. While it involves instanced (single round) PvP matches, everything takes places in the greater context of a global war on a hex-based map. The strategy involved is incredibly complex, fulfilling a whole level of play that the regular missions don't touch. Your Agency, when combined with other Agencies, becomes an Alliance, and Alliances battle for control of territory. Facilities can be contructed to harvest resources, protect areas, house your headquarters, and so on. There are even bases that once occupied, provide a shield that cannot be penetrated by conventional means. Your alliance must construct a missile silo within range of these shields and launch a missile to punch through so your team can make a ground assault.

For many players, Conquest will be the main draw of the game, while others will never pay the subscription for it (the mode is free for everyone until March 3, 2010), although the subscription also provides additional character customization options and other perks. Whether the subscription is worth payingwill depend on the player and the support the game receives. If overall strategy isn't as appealing as quick PvP and PvE matches, then you won't want to pony up. Some players, though, will probably try Conquest once the regular game begins to feel stale.


Above: While it's good to heal your buddies, don't forget to take out the little repair robot healing the mech

We have to give respect to Hi-Rez Studios for taking a very daring, risky move by creating an action MMO unlike anything we've played before. Sure, it's different because it combines familiar tropes into something unusual, but it feels like a wholly new experience. It has its own artistic vision as well, with a decidely Tron-like style where armor and weapons are hightlighted with primary-colored glowy bits. Its world (future-Earth) has a detailed, interesting history that we hope becomes more than window-dressing and gets developed further.

Global Agenda faces an uphill battle toward success. No one seems to have heard of it, and thosewho have don't know exactly what it is. It's terribly user unfriendly to get into, and it balances on a weird fence between shooter and RPG. We're having a great time playing it, but we don't know how many will feel the same. Here's hoping that word of mouth and continued support by the developer allow it to blossom into a beacon of skill-based, sci-fi light amongst the vast, dreary ocean of WoW-clone MMOs.

Feb 8, 2010

More info

GenreAction
DescriptionGlobal Agenda is an exciting, fast paced action-MMO hybrid with RPG elements set in the near future. It may not appeal to some shooter or RPG purists, but for those looking for a unique co-op or competitive mutliplayer experience, GA delivers. Oh, and everyone gets a free jetpack.
Platform"PC"
US censor rating"Teen"
UK censor rating""
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
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Matthew Keast
My new approach to play all games on Hard mode straight off the bat has proven satisfying. Sure there is some frustration, but I've decided it's the lesser of two evils when weighed against the boredom of easiness that Normal difficulty has become in the era of casual gaming.