Jun 04, 2017 UNCHARTED 5 Trailer [E3 2017-2018] The future of live TV with 60+ channels. No cable box required. Cancel anytime. Dec 7, 2015 - 'This will be our fourth Uncharted game. Uncharted 4: A Thief's End. And Drake if there is to be an Uncharted 5, that remains to be seen.
Uncharted 4 has been one of the most popular video games that have hit the market in recent times. In fact, it has not been even a year that the latest edition of the game in the Uncharted series came out. It was in May 2016 that Uncharted 4 hit the market and immediately it became a real hit. But the fans have grown eager to know some information related to what is in the future of the game in the series Uncharted. Is there going to be an, is the biggest question that is making rounds in the minds of the fans of the game. Whether Uncharted 5 will at all be produced remains to be a matter of huge debate The fans of any video game always keep an eye on the development regarding the next game in that franchise.
And quite similarly fans have been very much interested to know whether there is going to be an Uncharted 5 at all or not. Regarding this, we have come across some sort of information and it might not make the fans feel very much secure about the fact that is going to come out from its original developer. In fact, if we take a look at the ending point of the last game, one can conclude that there is not going to be an Uncharted 5. However, being a fan, you cannot lose hope. And there has been a ray of hope if we take into consideration the words of Neil Druckmann and Nolan North.
North stated that he would be really interested in being a part of the game Uncharted 5 if it is made which doesn’t sound conclusive about the future of the game Uncharted 5. But Neil Druckman’s words do give the fans a little bit of hope that there might be an. He has said that the story of the game in the series Uncharted can be explored further but definitely not with Nathan Drake as the central figure. This sounds really incredible for all the fans, but the reality is that even if there is an Uncharted 5 it won’t be developed by its original developer Naughty Dog. Naughty Dog will definitely be there as the advisor of the game Uncharted 5 if there is any requirement while developing the game but they won’t be there as the chief developer of the game. And there is certainly going to be some changes as far as the plot of the game is concerned.
So for the time being it won’t be wise to wipe out the possibilities that the will hit the market. There are chances that Uncharted 5 will hit the market at some point in time later on. Till then we have to keep on waiting for official words to come in.
Image credit: naughty dog The Uncharted Series came to an end last week. We’ve been with Nathan Drake through thick and thin, through witty and morose. And with Uncharted 4 comes a moment to reflect on those adventures, their high points, and their low points. In many ways, Uncharted 4 is a reflection of where the industry stood in 2007, refined, polished and perfected for nearly a decade. But was it the best the series had to offer? There were five Uncharted games in total, all of them excellent, but not all of them equally so.
And because ranking is a thing that one does from time to time, I’ve done so: Uncharted 3: Drake’s Deception: This one was sort of a mess. The game was a trip through giant set pieces, some of which were built before the developers had any idea how they would fit into the story, and it shows. Not quite sure if it wanted to end close a trilogy or not, and not quite sure if it wanted to delve into Drake’s darker side or not, it ended up lacking both focus and drive. Uncharted 3 made some important gameplay strides forward, but I found myself more irritated with Drake than ever while playing it. A bad Uncharted game is still an excellent game, but for me Uncharted 3 just failed to capture that swashbuckling magic that defines this series. It felt stuck, and it felt, at times, like filler.
And while the Atlantis of the Sands is certainly a thing, it felt like a odd attempt to toe the “lost city” line. Does it always have to be a lost city? Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune: I debated the bottom two of this list for a while, because there are a lot of things we need to forgive about the first entry in this particular series. Naughty Dog hadn’t really figured the whole thing out yet, and neither the gunplay nor the navigation were quite there yet, and the pacing was all wrong. But it had that kernel to it that would later grow into Uncharted 2, and for all its faults, I had a better time with this game than I did with Uncharted 3. It was flawed, but it was fun. Fun is important, and that’s why I’m giving it no.
Uncharted: Drake’s Fortune. Image credit: Naughty Dog Uncharted: Golden Abyss — Some will be surprised to see a Vita port quite so high on this list. Uncharted: Gold Abyss was meant to be a selling point for Sony’s quixotic portable, showing us a future where we all played “console-quality (whatever that means)” games on the go, on the toilet, or on the couch when we didn’t feel like turning on the console. We all know how that panned out, but the Vita did leave us with this one. Golden Abyss was stacked with odd vita-specific features showcasing motion controls, a light sensitive camera, the touchscreen, and more, and that whole rigamarole could get pretty tiring. But at the heart of that game was Drake’s purest adventure in the entire series.
There was none of his troubled relationship with Elena, none of the broader emotional arcs that define the main series, just a good old fashioned adventure. Golden Abyss told a self-contained, satisfying story, and for that I give it number 3. The Uncharted series is a love letter to 30′s pulp adventure stories, and no game captured that better than Golden Abyss.
Uncharted 4: A Thief’s End — This game was a true accomplishment. It takes that emotional weight that bogged down Uncharted 3 and commits wholeheartedly, wrapping up Nathan Drake’s adventure with grace, charm and a a surprising maturity. It helps that the combat is the best in the series, it helps that the visuals are the best I’ve seen in any video game, ever, and it helps that Naughty Dog experimented with opening up the corridor shooter just enough to give us a hint of player agency. Uncharted 4 was a rough game to get through sometimes — knowing that you’re coming to the end of the adventure will do that to you. But Naughty Dog pulled it off in the most emotionally affecting game of the series. The treasure of Henry Avery, too, was the only goal in the series that felt like it had a story to tell every bit as interesting as the one in the present day. Uncharted 2: Among Thieves — As you can see from my love of Golden Abyss, I prefer it when Uncharted sticks to the breezy pulp that inspired it, and we see that in spades with Uncharted 2.
This the game that came to define the series, and for good reason: we were not yet weighed down with the broader character arcs that gave us such trouble in Uncharted 3, nor were we tasked with introducing the characters like we were in Uncharted. There are parts of this game that haven’t aged quite as well — the shooting could be improved, the stealth could seriously be improved, and you spend too much time crouched behind cover mowing down legions of enemies. But damn, was this an adventure. Grand, funny, exciting and quick, Naughty Dog managed to tell a story that didn’t lag for a single moment, from the opening moments on the train to a striking, quiet moment in a Tibetan village. This game, always, will be the masterpiece of the Uncharted series. Follow me on.