A PS4 review of Far Cry 5… cough, I mean Far Cry Primal! By Dustin Ritchea.
Far Cry Primal by Ubisoft is the fifth installment of the Far Cry series, and holding true to its predecessors, it is an open world adventure of mammoth proportions. Pun intended. Far Cry Primal is a different kind of game, and while it does a lot right, it doesn’t live up to its potential.
That’s a little harsh. Let me explain. Far Cry Primal is gorgeous. It takes place in 10,000 B.C.E. and it feels like the Stone Age. The world environment in this game is spectacular. Mountain ranges, caves, forests, and waterfalls scatter across Oros, the world you intend to conquer. There is a plethora of wild game (animals ranging from deer, badgers, and birds to crocodiles, bears, and mammoths), quests, objectives, settlements, battles, and secrets to keep you going for hours on end. It is jammed packed with items to collect, places to explore, and civilizations to conquer, but even with so much content, there is very little substance.
I will be the first to admit that this game, lacking as much story as it did, held my interest for a long time. It’s damn fun. Collecting items from killed prey to upgrade your weapons is awesome but, unfortunately, even that mechanic palls in comparison to the new Tomb Raider. What Far Cry does right is in its graphics and its world building. It develops a strong spiritual myth, a unique language, and a beautiful upgrade pallet, including skills, weapons, and even settlements. More amazing, there is almost no lag between environments, and that is saying a lot for as big as this world is. What it does wrong is that it’s repetitive with every little story.
Far Cry Primal is about Takkar, the last hunter of the Wenja tribe. Takkar and his men have been searching for Oros and the other members of their tribe for a long time, but at the outskirts of Oros they are attacked by a Sabertooth tiger and only Takkar survives. When he reaches Oros he discovers that the Wenja have been all but wiped out by a cannibalistic tribe called the Udam. Takkar sets out to find the lost Wenja and re-build his people. Along the way he discovers a shaman who feeds him a lot of human blood from a skull, which somehow leads to Takkar being chosen as the world’s beast master—so… after that he can tame wild beasts, including the Sabertooth tiger that killed his friends. He also meets other hunters and Wenja who join him on his quest, provided you upgrade their huts using animal skins and stones. About halfway through the game, even if you haven’t killed the Udam, a second tribe, the Izila, come to claim Oros. The Izila use fire as a weapon. That’s the game. You hunt animals, you rescue Wenja, you light bonfires, and you kill your enemies. That’s it. It’s a lot of fun, but there really isn’t any more than that.
You’ll meet some colorful characters—my favorite being Urki the thinker, who, as IGN points out, is a replica of Paulie Shore from Encino Man—who deliver some heartfelt moments and authentic laughs, but the game just doesn’t reach its apex. It feels like there could have been more. The stealth mode is clunky at best, the missions are repetitive—capture this town doing exactly what you did in the last 15 towns—and the ending is abrupt.
Even the well-developed mythos runs dry. There is no final explanation as to why you were the chosen one other than a cryptic prophesy made by the guy who chooses you in the first place. I thought maybe Oros was in danger and that’s why the animals join Takkar but, as it turns out, Takkar is just a likeable guy.
In the end, I would still buy this game again. It offers hours of fun, the graphics are eye glazing, and the world is truly breathtaking. This game’s sunsets are the promise we hoped Firewatch’s would be. You get to ride mammoths, kill ancient predators, and collect until your bags are full and your fingers are worn. Is it worth $60 bucks? Maybe not. Should you buy Fallout 4 before this game? Yes, absolutely. But if you like Far Cry, Primal is a great addition. I mean, you get to be a caveman. I’m particularly proud of Ubisoft for staying away from sex scenes, but even still, you hungry, you kill. You angry, you smash. Cave man strong. Cave man huge. Cave man PRIMAL!
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