![]() ![]() I think Mad Max fits nicely with these great (and wildly underappreciated) titles. Every few years I find myself falling for open world games that don't gain much traction. Avalanche delivered a unique open world experience that honed in on the pulse of Miller's theatrical tales. ![]() On top of it all, how cool is it that your car is basically your companion? You care about that thing almost as much as you do Max.Īfter spending a few weeks with Mad Max, I walked away from it pleased. I also enjoyed the side activities, such as hunting down components to create thriving settlements. Avalanche established a strong arc that begins with Max barely scraping by, and concludes with him rising to the stature of a wasteland juggernaut. I enjoyed the nicely paced progression systems that made Max's car more of a destructive force, and Max himself a combatant fit for the Thunderdome. His story continued a few months later in Avalanche Studios' video game Mad Max.Īlthough Game Informer's critic Matt Bertz found Max's interactive adventure a little too repetitive for his liking, I had a great time scavenging the desert and clearing it of raider threats. After disappearing from cinema for decades, Max return this year in arguably his best film, Mad Max: Fury Road. ![]() Our guide through this dangerous world was Max, a former Australian police officer who has a little humanity left in him, but is mostly resourceful and relentless. ![]() The earth is scorched, resources are scarce, and all it takes to survive is a nice car and a general lack of empathy for human life. Born on the silver screen in 1979, George Miller's Mad Max captivated audiences with its potent take on the end of days. ![]()
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