

Our incredibly vulgar and sexist friend feels out of place these days. The problem is that, unlike some of those resurrected franchises, this one should have remained in its digital grave. Lots of people fell in love with this formula, which is why we still see releases and remakes to this day. Genre titles were fast-paced and a bit rough around the edges, delivering tons of action without a ton of finesse. When its incredibly popular predecessor was released, the first-person shooter genre was still in relative infancy. From the start, the shootouts, gore and lewd content never take a break. It’s classic Duke Nukem game play, with action always speaking louder than words. Ever-memorable pig cops and ugly aliens make a return, destined for some bullets to the brain or an explosive finale. He’s ready to kick ass and chew bubblegum once again.ĭuring the game’s several hour-long campaign, Duke must venture throughout his beloved city – a fictionally designed version of Las Vegas – taking out every foe in sight. The pistol is loaded and the one-liners have been cooking. The hero must save the day again, and it seems like it’s an event this particular one has been waiting years for. Needless to say, it cramps Duke’s style very much, making him take time out from his busy schedule of pinball, beautiful women, talk shows and awards banquets. This lengthily delayed sequel begins as the dastardly aliens launch a new attack on our life-supporting planet.

The man loves the attention and is making the most out of his immense popularity. Perhaps this complacency could be seen as laziness, but that’s not the case. He’s the poster boy for bravery, known and respected all around the world. Our titular, cigar-smoking, one-line spewing hero, has been basking in glory for many years after stopping the alien colony’s last digital invasion. Duke Nukem Forever takes the reigns from Duke Nukem 3D, which was certainly Duke’s best adventure, and a game that I loved.
