Borderlands 2 Review
Xbox 360
Grab Your Guns and Let's Start Looting
Reviewed by Grayshadow on Sep 20, 2012
It has been three years since the release of the original Borderlands, which allowed players to first set foot on the dangerous world called Pandora in search of vast riches. This cell-shaded first-person shooter used cooperative play and goofy humor to create a world full of wonder and loot.
While Gearbox uses a lot of mechanics that made the first game so great, the developers have refined enough of the game to make it superior to the first one. While some of the issues from the first game still exist, Borderlands 2 refines and improves enough of the old mechanics to make it an adventure you'll want to share with all your friends.

Taking place after the events of the first Borderlands, you take control of one of four vault hunters who have come to Pandora in search of loot. However, since the opening of the vault in the first Borderlands, the Hyperion Corporation, led by Handsome Jack, has had the entire planet under its control. It’s your job to stop Jake from gaining possession of a legendary item, take your revenge, and assist the people in Pandora. The story isn’t anything special, but it is a large improvement from the first game.
Pandora isn’t the same a deserted planet full of bandits and murderous animals but populated with much more characters for you to interact with. The characters' list has expanded with a diverse number of old and new faces, each of whom has entertaining things to say. Characters such as the four playable characters from the first game make a return and play a large role in the story, as well as other notorious people, such as Mad Moxxi and Scooter.
New additions, such as the villain Handsome Jack and the disturbing Tiny Tina, are delightful additions that maintain the same goofy nature of the Borderlands universe. Most importantly the people that populate the world don’t look or act like mindless husk that either grunt or remain mute, but interact with the environment and actually speak.
Gearbox has also updated the dialogue of the enemies you face, spouting psychotic and threatening taunts as they attempt to collect the reward for your head. Strangely, an option to review these conversations is absent since characters can unexpectedly stop talking when another character begins to speak.
The voice acting in Borderlands 2 is nothing less than spectacular. Each character is brought to life with strong writing that combines heartwarming moments, murderous outbursts, and humor. At times, I would stop and listen to the person speaking, to prevent it from being cut off by some unexpected event. These personalities are what bring Pandora to life, something that was absent from the first game.

While the characters provide a lot of entertainment, it is the world of Pandora that will keep you busy. The environments and locations within Borderlands 2 are larger, more diverse, and offer an array of richer colors to allow each detail to illuminate the screen. Like the first game, some textures still tend to pop in, but this is still a visually appealing world, with a lot to offer. Explorers will find a lot of challenging enemies and visually pleasing environments.
But what is an adventure without missions, and Borderlands 2 offers a large amount of optional quests and a wonderful array of story missions. While a lot of the missions still require you to collect, defend, and kill specific targets you will presented with creative dialogue and sometimes a wacky objective to complete, just wait till you find the mission “Shoot This Guy in the Face”.
With an online checklist, you’ll be able to track each task and ignore objectives to prevent unnecessary clutter, allowing you to complete one mission and move on to the next easily. It’s a shame that a separate save function is absent; instead, those seeking to replay a certain mission will have to replay the entire game.
Borderlands 2 includes a challenge system in addition to the traditional experience system found in RPG’s. The challenges in Borderlands 2 are full of specific but plentiful tasks that automatically update and reward you continuously with tokens and increase your badass rank. These special items allow you to permanently upgrade various attributes that apply to all your characters.
This overarching reward system fosters a friendly environment and encourages players to experiment with other classes without feeling like they are starting from scratch when beginning a new game.

Completing missions and challenges is fun, but it wouldn’t be as much fun without physical rewards, of course, I’m talking about loot. Guns, grenades, shields, modifications, and relics offer a lot of possibilities to improve or alter your combat abilities. Unlike the first game, the gun models have been updated with more visual options.
Customizing your weapons and armor with a large number of options for you to change and improve your loadout during the course of the game. You can mark useless items called junk to sell easily and pick up items such as money, health, and ammo automatically without having to manually input the command.
Finding a new piece of loot is fun, but testing it on one of the many hostile enemies that inhabit Pandora is even better. Every enemy you face, whether they are human, animal, robotic, or mutated, will prove to be formidable, and they don’t mind fighting one another.
New enemies, such as the Stalker, that can turn invisible, are one of many new enemies that will require you to change tactics and approach each fight with caution instead of charging in. These new foes are refreshing since each area you enter can be littered with new adversaries for you to kill.

Despite the new enemies, combat hasn’t changed much from the original game. The shooting mechanics remain the same solid style from the original game, such as a fight-for-your-life moment where you can revive yourself if you manage to kill an enemy before the timer runs out.
All the elements from the first game return, with the exception of a new substance called slag. This purple material weakens the defense of any enemy and amplifies damage. Fall damage has also been removed, removing the need to be cautious when jumping off a cliff.
The four new characters offer new abilities and tactics to better accommodate the updated system. While players will still have original classes such as Maya the Siren and Axton the Commando the newest additions; Zero the Assassin and Salvador the Gunzerker are exciting and welcomed additions.
Each character comes with a special ability, such as Maya’s talent to trap enemies in the air, Axton’s turret, Zero’s decoy, and Salvador, who is able to go into a rage that increases damage and defense. Unlike the original Borderlands, these characters are provided with a backstory to describe their lives before coming to Pandora, but these audio recordings must be found in the world.

Each of these racial abilities can be upgraded and altered through the skill tree. Offering three different options for each character, players can choose to reset them at any time. While options for specific weapon types exist within the skill tree, your character isn’t limited to specialized weapons anymore.
You can also slightly change the appearance of your character, but these are limited to new headgear and clothing colors that can be found throughout Pandora. Those seeking to fully upgrade their character will have to play through Vault Hunter mode, a harder difficulty setting that scales the obstacles of Pandora to your level and saturates the fields with dangerous creatures.
While Borderlands is fun to play with yourself, you can bring up to four people along for the ride. Borderlands 2 supports up to four-player cooperative play and allows for split-screen up to two players of any class. While the game attempts to set the difficulty based on the amount of players and level of each character it is best if you coordinate with people to ensure that things don’t get out of control.
One of the issues of the first game was joining games with players who were either ahead or behind on missions, now if you complete later missions while someone else is hosting the game you can choose to skip it when you gain access to it. Tougher enemies, better loot, and the excitement of completing objectives together make cooperative play the best way to play through Borderlands 2.

If you played Borderlands, then you’ll feel right at home with Borderlands 2. Gearbox doesn’t attempt to go beyond what the original title did but instead builds on what made the first game great with new additions and refinements, making it a successful successor to the original game.
While it can feel hollow at times with similar objectives and a lack of separate save files, the world of Pandora is full of adventures that you will want to spend hours exploring, completing missions, and getting better loot. So raise your guns high and let’s start hunting for treasure.
Contributor, NoobFeed
Verdict
Gearbox doesn’t attempt to go beyond what the original title did. Instead, it builds on what made the first game great with new additions and refinements, making it a successful successor to the original game.
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