Metro Exodus PC Enhanced Edition: A prettier apocalypse You then travel across Russia with Anna, her father, and a ragtag group of Spartans, looking for other settlements that have been kept secret for decades.
By the end of the first hour, you’re under the sun, on a huge speeding train called the Aurora. See, unlike before, you’re not merely confined to the dank sewers and endless dark of the Metro itself. Well except Anna, Artyom’s wife, who tags along with you a fair bit in Metro Exodus. Artyom being mute doesn’t help the situation either, rendering him and you as an inert bystander until it’s time to risk death and injury again.Īs with previous entries in the series, no one else really seems to do much. Likewise, much of the exposition is delivered by other characters outright saying it. A lot of the cooler stuff that happens to protagonist Artyom – such as narrowly surviving a fall to his death or almost being eaten alive by a huge mutated fish – happens in scripted cutscenes. Metro Exodus PC Enhanced Edition is one of those games that makes me worry there’s such a thing as “too cinematic”.