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BORDERLANDS 101:

1.)  Kill Dudes

2.)  Loot Guns

3.)  Repeat

A simple, almost eloquent formula. And whether you were a fan of the first Borderlands or not, you can’t deny it’s success.

But how does that formula fare the second time around?

Title: Borderlands 2
Developer: Gearbox Software
Publisher: 2K Games
Release Date: September 18, 2012 (North America)

The story of the first Borderlands, while well served for a co-op loot-and-shooter, was decidedly thin. It went pretty much like this; popular myth holds that somewhere on the backwater-wild-west-god-forsaken-shit-hole of a planet, Pandora, is an ancient alien chamber (or Vault), packed to the brim with… whatever would be a really cool thing for an ancient alien race to bury in a giant vault. Four adventures, dubbed Vault Hunters, through much shooting and looting, quest to find the fabled chamber. Five years pass and we come to learn that there are actually multiple, possibly many Vaults buried on Pandora. So now a new quartet of different, yet oddly familiar Vault Hunters take up the hunt. Only now, they must reach their prize before millionaire and professional douche bag, Handsome Jack, gets there first.

I love a good first-person shooter. Ever since my dad brought home our first PC loaded with a copy of Wolfentein 3d, I’ve been hooked. The basic concept of point and shoot hasn’t really changed in twenty years, despite the many coats of paint that have been slathered over it. That’s not to say the genre hasn’t evolved at all, but all of that evolution has been represented largely by incremental mechanical tweaks, like limiting how many guns can be carried at one time or assigning grenades to their own dedicated button. Few successful attempts have been made to introduce concepts and mechanics from other corners of the greater video gaming cosmos to the genre. And it’s for this reason, I think, that the Borderlands series deserves special mention. The first game had done a respectable job of honing in on a balance between shooter and RPG. The sequel has taken that tenuous balance, and really allowed it to coalesce into a truly entertaining experience.

Some old school RPG fans may scoff at the notion of considering this game an RPG. Such people may find the character progression system a bit lacking and they wouldn’t be entirely wrong. It’s neither vast nor terribly complicated but don’t be fooled into thinking that leveling your character is not still a compelling experience. I assure you, it is. It is important that we remind ourselves that Borderlands 2 is still a shooter, and the point of a shooter is to shoot things (Duh).  As such, whatever you do in that game, whether it be looting dungeons or leveling up talent trees, it should in some way work towards that end. So no one character will ever be just a healer or just a tank, like in many more traditional, party-based RPG’s. On Pandora, like in the U.S. Marine Corps, everyone is a rifleman. Nobody is ever resting their trigger finger. Unless they’re reloading, of course. This more multifunctional approach to each character’s game play experience makes the need for long, overly precise skill trees almost unnecessary. I do wish the skill points had more of an impact early on; you don’t really feel like you have much of a character class until latter levels. Ultimately, would this game be better served by a wider selection of learnable skills? Yes. Has the decidedly simple skill structure negatively impacted my enjoyment of the game? Not really.

Skill trees aren’t the only part of the character progression system worth mentioning. Making its debut here in Borderland 2 is the "Badass" system. Instead of tracking the progress of any one particular character, though, the Badass Rank measures you as a Borderlands 2 player as a whole. That means that no matter how many different characters you create, your Badass Rank will remain consistent across all of them. As you complete challenges, you are rewarded with Badass tokens. Each token allows you to add a permanent but very small bonus to one of five skill traits randomly selected from a pool of traits. The options range from overall health, to elemental chance and effect intensity. These skill trait modifiers also remain consistent across all of your characters, so it’s good to keep them varied enough to suit all of your characters’ different particular needs. Admittedly these modifiers are not very significant, just a few percent here and there. In fact, sometimes they can feel a like just another set of numbers to make sense of in a game already inundated with more than it’s fair share of ambiguous statistics. Still, you will eventually come to understand that no matter what character you’re playing at the moment, you’re always making some kind of progress as a player.

But characters and players aside, how does the game itself progress? What do you do with all these fancy guns and flashy skills? Well, honestly, not much other than shoot people and open chests. Not unlike the ever-popular dungeon crawler.  Now before we get ahead of ourselves, I will say this; if you are looking for a classic Roguelike, dungeon crawling experience, Borderlands 2 isn’t that. Dungeons are not randomly generated, or even change a single iota from play through to play through. The same monsters spawn at the same levels, in the same places, next to the same loot containers every time. So think more like raiding in World of Warcraft than dungeon crawling in Diablo. But mercifully, unlike World of Warcraft, there’s always so much new and better equipment coming at you from enough different directions, you’ll rarely ever find a reason to rerun previously beaten dungeons if you don’t want to. Unless, say, you wanted to help out a lower level pal in co-operative play.

And that’s were the real beauty of Borderlands 2 lies; Co-op mode. At any time, you can leave your game to team with other players, shoot, and, kill, and plunder, and then return to your personal game with all the loot and experience you earned in the other game. You can round up a posse of up to four total players either online, via split-screen, or both simultaneously. And this is when things can get a little over-the-top, because while the quality of loot increase depending on how many players are in the game, so does the enemy difficulty. A team of four that isn’t at least somewhat well balanced could find itself overwhelmed by the ramped-up difficulty. And with no real in-game system to keep players looting honestly, things can get a little anxious every time a new loot chest comes into view. But trivialities aside, this is why you buy a game like Borderlands 2. Not that you can’t have fun flying solo, but co-op play is absolutely the heart and soul of this game. So much so, that the lack of any real competitive multiplayer elements goes pretty much completely unnoticed, and for good reason. The last thing the world needs is another mediocre competitive multiplayer shooter.

All in all, Borderlands 2 has truly taken me by surprise. As someone who, quite honestly, held no love for the first Borderlands, I didn’t really expect there would be much for me in the sequel. I am happy to report I was wrong.  But perhaps there in lies the reason why. This game is not too drastically different from its predecessor, but perhaps there has been enough small improvements made to rope in people who missed the boat the first time around. Borderlands 2 may not be the best game I’ve ever played, and probably won’t even be the best game I play this year. But it certainly has grabbed my attention in a way that a shooter hasn’t in a long time and that is certainly worth something.

Score 90%

(90-99%: Phenomenal - A fantastic experience that surpasses almost all expectations.)

Comments

  • theottomatic91 Avatar
    theottomatic91
    11 years, 6 months ago

    Great Review, I will look forward to getting this game when I get the cash

  • JLanark Avatar
    JLanark
    11 years, 6 months ago

    I must admit that I wasn't too much into the prequel as a lot of other people were, but seeing more gameplay of the second one has started to turn my opinion around a little. I think I'll give this game a shot after all.

  • Greg Avatar
    Greg
    11 years, 6 months ago

    Awesome review Kris. Definitely agree with your points. This is a great sequel to the original. Could end up being the best sequel of the year, unless Assassins Creed 3 takes the figurative cake.

  • Avatar
    Sickbrain
    11 years, 6 months ago

    The game is fun and definitely better of the two. There are just not that many big changes between the original and this game. Would have been nice to see a completely different class. I'm playing Zero sniper and it feels identical to the first game. Also new gambling system takes away from the excitement of opening weapon chests in the world. All my weapons come from gambling. I collect money and then spend it on gambling to get better weapon and not on anything else.
    If you never played Borderlands then just buy 2nd and don't bother with the 1st game because 2nd is better. If you already own the first game, then I wouldn't spend $60 on the 2nd and wait until it drops in price.

  • Chrissaviour Avatar
    Chrissaviour
    11 years, 6 months ago

    Very good review.

    I'll probably get this game eventually when I have any free time.

  • Velius Avatar
    Velius
    11 years, 6 months ago

    I liked borderlands 2 enough but sometimes I would randomly get bored and have to turn it off, it's a very strange feeling that I also had with the first. But like the first borderlands, I'm sure when I go through it a second time with friends it will blow my mind and be insanely fun. I liked your review and think the game is deserving of it.

  • daethwing188 Avatar
    daethwing188
    11 years, 6 months ago

    I agree on almost all points.

  • dumon Avatar
    dumon
    11 years, 6 months ago

    I never really got into the first game. Maybe if I play this one, I'll put my focus almost entirely on loot - perhaps that will make me addicted. Sweet review btw!

  • crossoutlaw Avatar
    crossoutlaw
    11 years, 6 months ago

    It's a good game, but there just isn't enough change. Feels more like borderlands 1.5, maybe i was just burnt by playing soo much or the original game i got burnt out (i played all of the DLC's and a whole second playthrough of the main). For starters the menu is confusing and really a step back from the first game. The whole badass upgrade system is nice, but like the skills in this game really not noticeable. The skills in this game for all they have said, doesnt really change things up much (siren and solider from what ive played are the most boring). All in all its a polished game thats worth your 60 dollars, but not enough has changed for it to be exciting.

    The thing that really irritated me was that they never implemented the unique drops for each individual player, we still have to fight over boss loot or rare randoms when playing with ppl. Also made no sense to take out the backpack and ammo SDU and put them into a eridian bar black market store, was more fun to do quest for backpack upgrades and u need ammo upgrades in this game (u run out sooo fast).

  • Avatar
    Rendrak
    11 years, 6 months ago

    I wasn't a huge fan of the original but I'm liking this one a lot better.

  • TrigggrHppy Avatar
    TrigggrHppy
    11 years, 6 months ago

    I feel like there is less random blue/purple/orange loot this time around, and when combined with a greater degree of difficulty, the game is a bit harder than I remember. Not a bad thing necessarily, just something I noticed.