Max Payne 3

His wife and baby daughter have been slaughtered by junkies, and he’s been accused of a murder he didn’t commit, forced into a hallucinogenic drug-fuelled nightmare, betrayed by those he trusted and marched out of the New York police force. He’s even been played on-screen by Marky Mark in a film adaptation that has a Metacritic percentile average of 31. Max Payne has every right to be cynical. If you couldn’t tell by checking his biography, you should look at his new bald, bearded and grumpy face in Max Payne 3, as seen plastered all over this page. He even wears a grubby white sleeveless T-shirt because he’s that angry.

Even the blind will know Mr. Payne is still not a happy man. He’s going to have more spoken internal monologue than ever, so expect him to moan about fortnightly bin collections and how Mars bars are smaller than ever while he stomps his way through shanty towns and the mansions of criminals, destroying the environment and killing every living thing between him and the level’s end.

These Brazilian locales remind us of Uncharted 2 and look just peachy, but it’s the animation of the killing that’s going to add further perverse pleasure to this stylish butcher’s yard. Bodies will react to bullets using the same animation systems found in GTAIV and so no two deaths will look the same. You won’t have to look hard to tell, because slow-mo porno-kills are as much a part of the show as ever.

There’s been a big uproar over the new direction Rockstar is taking with Max Payne. The cold streets of New York have been replaced by heated shootouts in the shade of palm trees. But let’s be honest, there wasn’t much else to Max Payne other than a slick noir look and violent slow-mo shooting while a man’s rendered, constipated face muttered stuff like, “I had a dream of my wife. She was dead.”

So is this new game really taking a major shift in direction? The gameplay would seem to be ticking the boxes while adding new gimmicks to the action like destructible environments. It may be less King of New York and more Scarface, but there’s the same amount of violence, slow-mo and pained expressions as before. This new Max should have some counseling. Nothing’s changed.

Jul 22, 2009