Marvel Rivals Review – I Can Do This All Day

Estimated reading time: 2 minutes

Marvel Rivals has come for the hero-shooter crown, and it’s hard to argue that it doesn’t have a legitimate claim to the throne. It has a big roster of heroes with a ton of variety across them, no role queue, and 6v6, all of which are important to a great hero shooter. Although it lifts more than a few of Overwatch’s ideas, it is actively targeting and addressing some of the biggest complaints players have about Blizzard’s shooter. Marvel Rivals expands on familiar ideas in smart ways and has a visually striking and distinct art style. Add in that it’s a fun multiplayer experience and it makes it far more than just another also-ran hero shooter clone.

Opting for 6v6 and a third-person camera view, Marvel Rivals has a vast variety of playstyles across its launch roster. Offering everything from simple shooting-focused heroes like Punisher to complex melee heroes like Spider-Man, all the while making it feel cohesive. Although it will undoubtedly be chaotic for players trying a hero shooter like this for the first time, there are a variety of heroes that make picking up the game simple and an impressive roster of alternative picks that can gradually increase complexity.

It does have limited main game modes at launch, with only Domination, which involves fighting over a control point; Convoy, where a team escorts a payload; and Convergence, which is a combination of the two. These are split across a variety of maps taken from the Marvel multiverse, with locations like Tokyo 2099, Yggsgard, and the Intergalactic Empire of Wakanda. These different locations provide a ton of environmental variety, with the pristine look of Asgard contrasted with the dense buildings of Tokyo 2099. While the visual styles don’t change the flow of the game, the map layouts do. For example, both Tokyo 2099 and Klyntar have hybrid maps–where the attacking team must capture a control point, which unlocks a payload to push–but Tokyo 2099 has multiple buildings blocking the defenders’ line of sight, while on Klyntar the area from spawn to the point is much more open, promoting more long-range hero options. It can become visually stale, but more importantly, having fewer modes means that your team’s strategies don’t shift as much from match to match, which can result in them blending together because each individual match doesn’t feel unique, aside from the team compositions.

Continue Reading at GameSpot

Editor-in-Chief for Robots Over Dinosaurs Anthony has been gaming since the 1980s. Working adjacent to the gaming industry for the last 20 years, his experience led him to open Robots Over Dinosaurs.

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