Tactical Espionage Action arrives on PlayStation 3, courtesy of Konami's long-awaited Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots, which brings an end to one of video game's most memorable characters, mercenary Solid Snake, who is a gray haired old man. An army of gorgeous cut scenes and a beautiful score highlight this memorable third person adventure, which ties up loose ends while weaving new characters and plot twists into the Metal Gear mythos. It's a long-winded tour of duty that, despite its somewhat bland gameplay, offers an unrivaled cinematic experience.
Snake's adventure begins in the war-torn Middle East, where he slithers through battles in search of his evil twin, the nefarious Liquid, who inhabits the body of MGS villain Revolver Ocelot. In order to kill him, Snake must sneak past or engage hundreds of foot soldiers, as well as vanquish expertly designed boss characters, including Vamp (from Metal Gear Solid 2) and the twisted Beauty and the Beast Corps, four terrifying ladies with signature abilities. He gets help from his friend and techo genius, Otacon, who provides Snake with advice and equipment, most notably the delightful OctoCamo, which changes color in real time and blends into the environment. Along the way, he runs into old friends, makes new ones and uncovers more plot twists than a daytime soap.
Despite having one foot in an old age home, Snake doesn't move any slower, nor is he inept at using a weapon. He creeps on his belly, leaps over things and flies through the air, so it's good that Konami elected to make his appearance central to the plot and not the action. Even better, MGS4 has the most stacked armory in franchise history. You'll acquire numerous weapons early and often, including the MP7 Submachine Gun, Tanegashima Assault Rifle, an RPG-7 Missile Launcher, the M870 Custom Shotgun, grenades of all types, claymore mines and C4, most of which are upgradeable via Drebin, an arms dealer that exchanges weapons for points you acquire during play. Picking up guns you already own automatically earns points, and you can access Drebin's shop via the Start button and sell unwanted equipment. This will allow you to purchase more exotic guns as well as scopes, fore grips, bullets, laser and dot sights. Drebin also comes in handy when you need to unlock weapons; outdated nano machines in Snake's body prevent him from using certain guns.
Although over the shoulder and first person perspective action is fun, the combat doesn't produce the same visceral experience that other shooters possess. Scoring headshots earn you instant kills, but repeatedly shooting someone in their legs or chest yields no physical effect, as bad guys stand there absorbing punishment. This is ridiculous compared to the upcoming Resident Evil 5, where enemies fall when shot in the leg or rocked backwards after taking a round to the shoulder. Furthermore, we came upon a gun turret, only to discover that we had no evildoers to shoot. There's no point putting a turret into a game if you won't let us use it.
Metal Gear Solid 4 Screens
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
Metal Gear Solid 4: Guns of the Patriots is the final chapter in the saga of Solid Snake which sends him around the world in pursuit of his arch nemesis, Liquid Ocelot. Armed with new gadgets and abilities, Solid Snake must shift the tides of war into his favor, using the chaos of the battlefield to infiltrate deep into enemy territory. In his globetrotting final mission, Snake must sneak deep into enemy locations in the Middle East, South America, and other corners of the Earth to foil Liquid Ocelot's plans for total world domination.
Konami
With that said, the Metal Gear series isn't known for mindless shooting and MGS4 is no exception. You'll get the most enjoyment from finding ways to avoid detection by creating diversions and utilizing OctoCamo as well as the Solid Eye, a device that enables Snake to see in the dark via infrared, as well as zoom in on faraway targets. On the downside, enemies act ridiculous when they bump into camouflaged Snake. A guy will run into him, scope out the scene and then leave. OctoCamo doesn't obscure Snake's head, so it makes no sense why enemies would run into a mostly invisible object and find nothing strange about it. He picks up additional camo along the way that makes him even more invisible, but that doesn't justify seeing his head exposed through Act 1. It looks silly.
If you must fight the enemy, you can always incapacitate them with tranquilizer darts or sneaking up from behind and knocking them out. Most enemies hold valuable items, so it pays to check them before moving on. In fact, Metal Gear Solid 4 has numerous goodies to collect, including ramen noodles, rations, bullets and even Playboy magazines, which Snake can admire. In series tradition, he can slip underneath a cardboard box to avoid detection, but now he can also hop into a rusty barrel and roll around (doing this for too long makes him barf). And despite his age, he's hip with an iPod (characters have Apple computers in cut scenes), which you can equip and then listen to soundtracks from previous Metal Gear video games during play. There are also references to producer Hideo Kojima (a box says "No Room for Hideo") and his video games (Otacon has Zone of the Enders wallpaper on his computer screen).
All of this combines to form a powerful game that's just as thrilling as the summer's best movies, but like all Metal Gears, there's a bitter sweet ingredient that at times makes the game hard to digest. Confusing commercials raise question marks at first, and some of the cut scenes are unbearably long, thanks to characters rambling on. This winds up damaging the game, since Konami uses awkward pacing to tell the story. At times, you'll watch a long cut scene, play for a few minutes and then watch another. You can skip them, but then you'd deprive yourself of the storytelling, admittedly the game's best feature.
It also doesn't help that the camera almost always fails when in tight spaces, zooming in too far. We also struggled with the menu system, which forces the player to scroll through too many items to find something he or she needs. Once equipped, it's easy to accidentally press a button in the heat of battle and disarm Snake, which could lead to his demise.
It's also worth noting that despite the game's slick graphics, some effects aren't so hot. Fire looks terrible, and the glass breaking animation is equally horrid. Neither ruin the visual splendor, but are in stark contrast to MGS4's otherwise stellar presentation.
With five difficulty levels, enjoyable stealth based play and plenty of over the top action, Metal Gear Solid 4 is one of the best PlayStation 3 games. That said, its features, acceptable 10 years ago, seem foolish given the better playing games on the market. Snake's epic, final act just isn't the triple A extravaganza we expected, and it's clear that if Konami intends to continue this franchise or spin off into something new, it needs to study its competition and evolve, delivering shorter cut scenes and superior shooting. But for now, this is one of the most important games in history and you'll dig its cool boss battles, at times witty dialogue and unrivaled sneaking mechanics. Just be sure to keep a magazine handy when those cut scenes get ridiculous.
[Editor's Note: We were unable to access MGS4's online mode, Metal Gear Online, due to Konami's nonsensical sign up process, which forces gamers to create a Konami ID independent of their PlayStation IDs. Its system was unable to register us after repeated attempts, and we will revisit this exciting mode as soon as it works.]








Reader Comments (103)
Dear Chris Buffa, Where did you get your journalism degree from? You may want to get your money back.
They gave MGS4 an 8. Deal with it and go on with your lives. Get girlfriends or something. ha!
Feast on this!!!!! http://www.crispygamer.com/_GeneratedPages/GameReviews/Review170.aspx
and if you would look on other sites like literally everyone it will get at least a 9 mostly 10's. because those sites are fair and realize the aweomeness of said game
U know that they gave this an average review because this site is microsoft loyal. But they can't get it through their thick skulls that the ps3 is the better console with better more quality games ala MGS4.
GTA 4 a 10? MGS 4 an 8? I think thats all that needs to be said. Everyone and their mother knows that the GTA was not a perfect game. It was a great game, but not a 10. If you wanna say that MGS 4 was not perfect I can respect that but, it is the closest to perfection in the next gen era of gaming, HANDS DOWN! What's worse is that this reviewer actually had the nerve to explain why he gave it an 8 compared to other reviews. Like Gamedaily didnt buy into the GTA4 hype machine. No reason to get to upset though because the true gamers that read reviews can tell which reviews are being objective and fair and the ones like these that I just read.
First off, I have been playing MGS since its release on PS1. 1998 I believe it was. This is a ridiculous review FOR MANY MANY MANY REASONS.. First off, "full of bland game play," I guess they love running back and forth behind a rock shooting 700000 rounds, getting hit 80 times and not dying. Also they must like AI without the INTELLEGENCE part of it. "Cutscenes were unbearably long" Thats what mgs has been about since its debut on PlayStation. The first Metal Gear Solid had like 6 hours of FMV's. This one has, according to the special edition blu ray, 8+ hours of stunning HD FMV's. And another thing, why write a review if you don't take the time to review every acpect. There are FIVE count them FIVE difficulties, including the unlockable Big Boss Hard. Plenty of extra possiblities, 40 emblems that summarize your game play, many secrets and hidden weapons, and the ever so infamous Big Boss Perfect Playthrough which invloves SHEAR skill and an uncanny knowledge of the maps, enemy movements, bosses and weapons. And it's not technically the final chapter, maybe in Snakes case, but Hideo Kojima actually incourages people to continue the saga, he wanted to pass on his legacy, his views, in hopes that a younger generation can pick up where he left off and keep us gamer's hearts forever filled with the Metal Gear saga. MGS4 also tied EVERYTHING together from Snake Eater to Sons of Liberty, which I know we have all wanted to do. Amazing Game. 10/10 BullShi*T review, Bull**** score.
The new generation of gamers, much like the reviewer, just cannot handle this kind of game. The new generation demands mindless shooting/button mashing games. Look at our square enix games; none of them are turned base anymore because the new dumbass generation thinks it's boring. It's the same case here. The generation doesn't realize that this game is not about shooting everything you see, it's about avoiding all fights. "This is STILL a sneaking mission, snake." If you're part of this "action" generation of gamers and you see otacon say that at the beginning of the game, it's time for you to put the game down and go back to mindlessly sucking your own ****.
i just beat this game and it kicked so much ass. dont listen to this review, either go to a legit site or beat it yourself and get your own opinion its not fair to give this game a mediocre score and then put it on the aol dashboard where millions of people see what's posted there everyday. instead of posting one retards opinon, they could have listed different scores the game recevied from legit people. people new to the series could be influenced by this review if this is the first thing they read on it. long live snake!
lollerderby should have been the one to write this review his analysis is dead on and the actual reviewer is a joke.;