@SipahSalar: Many games available on VR have 'normal' modes as well. This game is one of 30-odd games that was sponsored by Oculus Studios, and is thus exclusives not only to VR, but to the Rift as well. You can play on Vive with a hack though.
@battlestreak: Maybe people are considering it a let down because it does nothing to fix the issues they had with the original, which is generally what people hope for from sequels?
Sounds to me like they improved little that was already good, didn't fix any of the problems of the original, and added a bunch of filler. ME might have been a series, based on the concept, that I would really get into if it was made by a more competent and imaginative studio.
@forester057: I would consider there to be a difference between you putting words in their mouth, and them "flat out" saying something. People still at school, which the lower range of their appropriate audience is, surely count as a 'younger audience' to anyone except people still at school.
@Dilandau88: In Australia students would have learned of the world wars in early high school, and covered WW1 properly in Year 9 (at about age 15, which also happens to be the local age restriction on Battlefield). Though, the Anzac story (of our disastrous campaign in Turkey in WW1) is a major public holiday and an important, formative part of our history.
The number of people here who read Eddie's word 'kids' in the heading and didn't seem to bother reading the article is too damn high. Or are they ignoring what EA actually said so they can validate their own preconceptions of EA and the BF audience?
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