Death Stranding 2 feels a bit like Metal Gear Solid 5, Hideo Kojima says: "When you return to your bed on the Magellan, it's the same feeling as returning to the plant"
And that's apparently not t�꧙�he only thing that feels familiar

We already knew that 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Death Stranding 2 was going to be pretty different to its predecessor in terms of how it handles combat, but director 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Hideo Kojima agrees that the sequel actually feels somewh🐷at similar to another one of his games, Metal Gear Sol🃏id 5.
In the latest issue of Edge magazine, 411, it's noted that the Death Stranding sequel feels a bit like a moderꦏn update to the 2015 Metal Gear Solid installment, and Kojima concurs: "I felt that myself when I played the game."
He continues, comparing the feeling of coming home to Death Stranding 2's ship, the DHV Magellan, to his stealth game. "When you return to your bed on the Magellan, it's the same feeling as returning to the plant in Metal Gear," he says, referring ꦺto the home base in the 2015 ga𒀰me.
Edge points to the VR challenges you can play in Death Stranding 2 when hanging out at its bases, noting how similar they feel to Metal Gear's own VR Missions. What's more, some sound effects, uh, sound quite familiar.
It's not the first time that Kojima has mentioned Metal Gear Solid when discussing the Death Stranding sequel. He recently noted that the idea of acquainting players with a gameplay concept in an initial game and then giving them more freedoms in the second – as Metal Gear Solid 1 did with stealth, before making it "a littlꦡe easier💜 to use weapons" in Metal Gear Solid 2 – has been implemented here.
"It was the same for Death Stranding. There aren't many 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:games about delivery, so we first had to get people accustomed to it first," he explained at the time. "For t🌜he sequel, we wanted to allow players that want to fight to do so more freely."
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I'm GamesRadar+'s Deputy News Editor, working alongside the rest of the news team to deliver cool gaming stories that we love. After spending more hours than I can count filling The University of Sheffield's student newspaper with Pokemon and indie game content, and picking up a degree in Journalism Studies, I started my career at GAMINGbible where I worked as a journalist f🔯or over a year and a half. I then became TechRadar Gaming's news writer, where I sourced stories and wrote about all sorts of intriguing topics. In my spare time, you're sure to find me on my Nintendo Switch or PS5 playing through story-driven RPGs like Xenoblade Chronicles and Persona 5 Royal, nuzlocking old Pokemon games, or going for a Victory Royale in Fortnite.
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