Tom Clancys Rainbow Six Vegas 2 is your last chance to rescue Vegas from an escalating terrorist siege that will force you into heart-pounding action from beginning to end. It’s the most intelligent squad behaviour we’ve seen, and although this smart programming is somewhat wasted on a couple of personality-devoid meat-heads in a semi-sequel, it can only be a good thing for the future of the franchise. The sequel to the award-winning next-generation first-person shooter returns to Sin City. Even more impressively, they’ll move to their destination by creeping from cover to cover, watching each other’s backs as they go, so there’s less chance of either ending up stranded in the middle of a room sucking up enemy bullets. Most of the missions of the singleplayer campaign allow you to take command over two other soldiers.
Your buddies Michaels and Jung are now smart enough to realise that taking a shortcut through a room full of terrorists isn’t the smartest way to get from A to B - a massive issue we had with the original. Mercifully, teammate AI has been considerably beefed up. The combat system served the original game well, yet there have been subtle, but notable changes since. There are few moments in gaming more satisfying than popping out from behind a door and pulling off a clinical headshot on one of Vegas’ many bad guys. As technology evolves and we hold to our promise to only deliver the best experiences to our players, it was unfortunately necessary to permanently discontinue. You can issue orders to your squad, let off a volley of blind-fire to kill off any terrorist dumb enough to rush you, or you can snap out and take a precision shot before returning to cover. As for Rainbow Six Vegas and Rainbow Six Vegas 2, our teams have investigated and found that these titles couldn't meet our stability and quality standards while running said update. When Bishop pushes his back to the nearest piece of cover, the camera zooms out to third-person, leaving you with a view of what’s ahead and a number of options at your disposal. In fact, when it comes to claustrophobic indoor gunplay, Vegas 2 actually trumps CoD4 thanks to its excellent cover mechanics. It’s a shame the developer couldn’t leave Las Vegas, because the actual combat is on par with the mighty Call of Duty 4. This might seem like an odd criticism, but if you’re buying a game called Rainbow Six Vegas 2, you’d expect a few of the famous landmarks to make it into the final product.