

It’s not quite Killzone-level s, but it’s decent enough to make you feel immersed. The main character’s models are actually among the highlights – things like guns look good and shoot realistically reload animations are smart and Mason/Woods look at their hands when interacting with the environments. This is a world full of paranoia and espionage and that does come across well – at least for as long as the story lasts, since it wraps up before going anywhere significant.Īs the product of an obviously rushed development cycle, Declassified is a graphically messy game that isn’t one to show off what the Vita is capable of – yet it certainly does have elements that are worth commending.

World-building is at least slightly stronger, but mostly due to the fact that Declassified pulls on the prior narrative beats set up by previous titles. Even the game’s final ‘boss’ is a disappointment due to the fact he’s never seen prior to you shooting him in the face, even though he has ties to the overall Black Ops narrative. Optimized for gamers on-the-go, Call of Duty Black Ops: Declassified delivers the most intense handheld Call of Duty experience to date, including both Special Ops Story mode and Multiplayer combat tailored for the PS Vita.It doesn’t help matters that there’s no character development either – Mason and Woods are completely unlikeable mercenary jerks who spout stupid one-liners yet say little else while mission briefings come from an un-named narrator between levels. Exposing that story exclusively on PlayStation Vita, Call of Duty: Black Ops Declassified explores original fiction in the Call of Duty Black Ops universe with an all-new campaign of Special Ops missions. “Before the future could be won, history had to be written. Walmart, via GAF, outed the following blip about the game along with the box art, which might still change. Little has been known about the title until now, well kind of. In case there was any doubt over the inclusion of multiplayer in PS Vita’s Call Of Duty: Black Ops: Declassified, Walmart posted the game’s description confirming that the first Call of Duty for PS Vita will indeed feature a multiplayer component.Įarlier this month at E3, Sony only revealed the title of the first Call of Duty game for PS Vita, Black Ops: Declassified.
