In Singularity, you will fight your way through an ever-shifting environment haunted with time ravaged creatures, while sudden time waves hurl you back and forth between 1950 and the present day. Use your wits and the perfect weapon, the Time Manipulation Device, to unravel the conspiracy on the remote island of Katorga 12.
GenreOther Shooters
Platforms ps3
DEVELOPER Raven Software | PUBLISHER Codemasters | RELEASE DATE
Singularity Reviews ps3
gamereactor.se review
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gamechronicles.com review
Singularity arrived with very little fanfare, which is a shame because this is a very good game. It all starts with an engaging story that sucks you in from the opening cinematic and carries you through to each of the three endings with tried and true gunplay and some inventive powers and time manipulation that never gets old. I highly recommend Singularity to fans of FPS games and great science fiction stories.
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gamingtrend.com review
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mygamer.com review
Singularity has its twists and turns throughout the single player mode and the action keeps an excellent pace and buildup throughout. Game mechanics are introduced at a good speed to keep things fresh and interesting. The multi-player component of Singularity is a good distraction from the single player with creature vs. solider combat, but seems like more of an afterthought after playing through the stellar single player.
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ztgamedomain.com review
Singularity is a solid FPS with a working gimmick and a solid narrative. Fans of games like BioShock and Metro 2033 owe it to themselves to give it a run through. I strongly suggest picking up the game for the single player and not banking on the online as I imagine it will quickly become a ghost town with its lack of modes and meager community.
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gamingexcellence.com review
Audio is similarly impressive. Guns and time effects sound powerful and punchy, even if the voice acting is average. A good orchestral score accentuates the given mood of any section or level. As a side note, I’m going to stop mentioning when Nolan North does a voice for a game, as he seems to not be in fewer games than he is in.
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3djuegos.com review
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gameinformer.com review
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psu.com review
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totalplaystation.com review
As I stated before, I’d love to see a sequel for Singularity. Some interesting mechanics and a decent story have gotten the ball rolling, and a well-designed follow-up could really knock the franchise out of the park. While it’s by no means a perfect game, gamers looking for great shooter experience with an enjoyable story and enthralling world need not look further.
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vandal.net review
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cheatcc.com review
On top of the single-player campaign, Singularity also comes with an interesting, but fairly limited, multiplayer component. The multiplayer only has two modes and a handful of maps for each. One mode is your standard team deathmatch, with six soldiers squaring off against six creatures, while the other simply has these two teams attempting to either attack or defend beacons. Certainly, there is a severe lack of options to be had here but what makes the multiplayer interesting are all of the TMD and creature powers that add varying gameplay and strategies to the otherwise limited experience. For instance, one class of soldiers can teleport while another has the ability to heal themselves and others. This may not keep you around for hundreds of hours, but it is a nice, albeit small, addition to the very entertaining single-player campaign.
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gamingxp.com review
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1up.com review
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gamespot.com review
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eurogamer.pt review
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giantbomb.com review
While the campaign is the main reason to check out Singularity, the multiplayer’s pretty decent. The extermination mode pits a team of human players against a team of creepy time monsters in an objective-based match. Playing as the enemy is pretty interesting, and the whole thing is class-based. So you can play as a healer, use teleport abilities, and so on. You can even play as a Phase Tick, which is a little crawling enemy that might as well be the Ticker from Gears of War. When playing as the Phase Tick, you can possess human soldiers, giving you the ability to kill the human team with their own weapons. It’s a bit monotonous, and it only has two modes, but the multiplayer’s still OK.
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extremegamer.ca review
More importantly you can also use the TMD on people! which turns them into dust within seconds. Yes it is as cool as it sounds, and it looks the part too. As if that wasn’t satisfying enough you also unlock other powers like a ball of energy that can slow time, telekinesis, a devastating sonic boom, and more. I won’t go into all the details because half the fun is unlocking new powers during the game. In comparison, and once again, the TMD really felt like an alternative to your character in Bioshock… hmm, a ‘Big Daddy’ armed with a TMD, now that’s a game!
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game-over.com review
Singularity is a good game. It looks good, plays great, has an above average story, but never manages to be better than the game(s) that inspired it. Raven Software is a great developer that almost always gives us excellent games, it’s just that this time they played it a little too safe, when it would’ve been best to take some leaps and think outside the box. If you’re looking for a good game with a satisfying single-player story and decent competitive multiplayer, Singularity might just be the game to hold you over until Halo: Reach ships out next month.
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ign.com review
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gamingbolt.com review
Singularity has a kind of Bioshock feel to it with its own unique take involving time manipulation. This first-person shooter brings you back and forth times like the cold war era and 2010.
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