RoboCop: Rogue Metropolis is getting a sequel this summer season, for PS5, Xbox Sequence X/S and PC.
The standalone follow-up, which is titled RoboCop: Rogue Metropolis – Unfinished Enterprise, will see gamers once more moving into the metallic swimsuit of Alex Murphy as he takes on quite a few criminals.
Unfinished Enterprise is ready in OmniTower, a big housing advanced created by OCP to offer for the wants of the residents of Outdated Detroit.
“However when a gaggle of extremely educated mercenaries armed with cutting-edge weapons takes management of the constructing and turns it into their lethal fortress, RoboCop should take motion and put a cease to their plans to undermine legislation and order,” the sport’s description reads.
In line with writer Nacon, gamers must cope with quite a few new hi-tech threats in OmniTower, from flying drones and exploding bots to anti-personnel turrets.
“Each ground is riddled with lethal traps, and closely armed elite troops,” the writer’s assertion says. “Count on to face minigun-toting armoured squads, particular forces outfitted with jet packs and even katana-wielding foes who look extra machine than man.”
Gamers may also have entry to new and returning weapons, together with the brand new Cryo Cannon, and can have the ability to “ship devastating ending strikes, whether or not smashing an opponent’s cranium in opposition to a concrete wall or into the closest drinks merchandising machine.”
Nacon is describing the sport as each a ‘standalone follow-up’ and a ‘standalone enlargement’, so whereas technically a sequel it’s unlikely to be so long as Rogue Metropolis.
RoboCop: Rogue Metropolis was launched in November 2023 and was praised for its no-nonsense motion, with VGC’s RoboCop: Rogue Metropolis evaluation calling it “a vastly entertaining return to easier instances”.
“We discovered its self-assuredness refreshing, and we dare say another gamers will do too,” we wrote. “This can be a recreation that doesn’t overcomplicate issues – there’s no elaborate merchandise crafting system, no service recreation tomfoolery, no shoehorned co-op or aggressive multiplayer modes.
“It’s only a stable motion recreation with entertaining dialogue, laughably over-the-top violence, a narrative that has you eager to see the place it leads and a protagonist who can punch enemies throughout a car parking zone, all whereas displaying clear reverence to the flicks and characters it’s based mostly on. What it’s, above all else, is proof that not each recreation has to reinvent the wheel. Generally, so long as you’re RoboCop and you’ve got a big provide of bullets, there’s a great time available.”