Our editors hand-pick these games based on a broad criteria: similar games that cater to the same player base, or games that share similar themes, gameplay mechanics, or artistic styles.
In Ghost Recon Breakpoint, you play as the enigmatic Nomad, a member of the US Special Forces unit known as the Ghosts. Rather than having to endure the potential social fallout and commentary for setting the game in a realistic country like Bolivia...
Ghost Recon Breakpoint gets the fundamentals right, with excellent gunplay and fun stealth missions that encourage strategy with a friend via online co-op. Unfortunately those are the only positives in a game riddled with technical issues and...
Compared to its predecessor, Ghost Recon Breakpoint takes one step forward then tumbles down a hill. A completely out of place loot grind, pointless survival elements, dim-witted AI and repetitive missions are the main reasons you should avoid this...
Ghost Recon: Breakpoint isn't even close to being a good, worthwhile or even functional game at its S$79.90 price point. It's a broken, unfinished mess that doesn't even have a story or world worth exploring, for however humongous Auroa is. Breakpoint...
Ghost Recon Breakpoint seems to be trying to please everyone. Its slow-burn of a single-player story coexists with an open-world bombastic romp with friends, which leads into a play-everyday grind for PvP-rewards, faction and raid gear with seasonal...
You take (or rather, if you played 2017's Ghost Recon Wildlands, you reprise) the role of Nomad, a member of the Ghosts – the elite unit that Walker walked out on. Your team is sent to a fictional archipelago in the middle of the South Pacific, called...
Thing is, no amount of collectables or subtle, satisfying gameplay loops can counter this half-baked hotchpotch of magpie'd ideas that neither function properly nor mesh. It's just a broken, swirling vortex of recycled Ubisoft mechanics stamped across a dismal, forgettable world.
Tom Clancy’s Ghost Recon: Breakpoint is a good game overall. The biggest complaint is that it generally feels like a mashup of other recent Ubisoft shooters and even with some attempts at forging its own identity, it seems like a game we’ve already played recently.
Pros:
Cons: