This serves as my review to the whole Mass Effect series, with focus on the third installment. It contains mild spoilers.
Mass Effect is a colossal undertaking in the world of CRPGs spanning 3 games of the period of 5 years. Assuming the role of Commander Shepard, the player sets on the quest to save the galaxy from the Reapers, …
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This serves as my review to the whole Mass Effect series, with focus on the third installment. It contains mild spoilers.
Mass Effect is a colossal undertaking in the world of CRPGs spanning 3 games of the period of 5 years. Assuming the role of Commander Shepard, the player sets on the quest to save the galaxy from the Reapers, synthetic life-form that invades the galaxy every 50 000 years to wipe out all advanced civilizations.
Mass Effect 3 is the last installment in the series, detailing the conflict between galactic civilizations and the Reapers and concluding the storylines that began in the first and the second game.
The best: Hands down, the best part of the series and in particular in ME 3 are all the characters you get to interact with. When I have ended the game, I had the feeling that I've ended a friendship with so many different people, all of whom had different, memorable and developing personalities, as well as abundant story-lines. The game makes you care about those commander Shepard meets on his quest. This video is an excellent flashback to most the characters you met in the series (spoiler alert):
http://youtu.be/pNxTlsWLIH0
The music through all the series and especially in ME 3 is outstanding and it serves well to enhance the atmosphere of the setting. Though ambient sounds of space exploration, to intense combat situations the music did deliver excellent experience.
The good: Through Mass Effect series in general Bioware has managed to create a unique thoroughly designed and though-out universe. When playing the first game I couldn't believe that the setting has been created from scratch. All the pieces, from different races, organisations and locations to weapons and specific characters are very well-outlined and explained, either though in-game interactions or the massive in-game codex that provides further detail in even the smallest aspects of ME universe.
The no-so-good: While certainly challenging at higher difficulties, the enemies of Mass Effect 3 do lack in variety. There are only three types of enemies in single-player campaign: the Reaper forces, Cerberus and the Geth, with later making rather small appearance in some two missions of the game. For the most part of the game you fight the same enemies over and over again, which gets old rather quickly, both in terms of gameplay and aesthetics. Mass Effect 2 had a proper variety - while similar in gameplay, many enemies had different aesthetics, ranging from mercenary groops, to stranded colonists.
Adding to that you have quite an extensive weapons arsenal, that, while bringing variety, seems cumbersome to master. Once again, in my opinion, Mass Effect 2 has handled it better, with decent, yet not-over-board variety of weapons.
The bad: Though it has been stated many times all over: the endings. Certainly, all three (four) endings are very logical and it's hard to think of different conclusion to the conflict with the Reapers, but, while Extended Cut DLC alleviate this somewhat, I couldn't help but feel cheated by the lack of how your choices of the previous games had little to no impact on the actual ending (Before you ask, no War Readiness rating shown as numbers isn't good enough).
The undefeatability of the Reapers. You don't see a single capital-class Reaper die conventionally until the battle for Earth cinematic (or Leviathan DLC). I get that it was done to emphasize on the importance of creating the big bad superweapon to defeat all the Repears in one stroke, it wouldn't hurt to show that the galaxy was actually fighting back and did manage to kill at least some of the capital-class reapers in process (a feat which, while extremely difficult, is not impossible).
The ugly:
Seeing Shepard dance at all occasions :)
All in all this is an excellent trilogy and I recommend that you play it regardless of your preferences.
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