This game is the fourteenth primary installment of the series. it's maddening.Call of Duty: WWII is a first-person shooter video game developed by Sledgehammer Games and published by Activision.
everywhere else it's endless shanghai and locker, or no people on the server. I have one server that plays only a variety of constantly shifting DLC maps that I enjoy playing on but that's it. Yeah, even as Battlefield 4 has a fairly large active community, it's still impossible to play half of the maps and modes anymore, as most players sit on their favorites, and the servers with the less popular ones are literally empty. I can't comment on the other more recent games as I haven't spent enough time on them the skill-based matchmaking is configured to feel like every lobby is either a cakewalk or incredibly hard. I personally don't think it's very good since it kinda feels very incomplete and not very well playtested.Ĭold War: honestly not too bad, but feels like a big step back from the older games. otherwise it's a decent game but kind of barebones.īO4: really weird game with much more hero shooter elements (like Overwatch) than previous games. maps on the whole kind of suck, also features Gustav Cannon, which may be the worst large map in the series.
WW2: interesting game in some respects, pretty dry overall though. it's really hard to keep up unless you put a ton of time into it Infinite Warfare: skill ceiling is probably the highest of any COD, but at the same time it wasn't super popular (relatively speaking) so the majority of people still playing are really, really good. two big downsides: matchmaking just doesn't work at all for some people and even on console there are people exploiting glitches to become literally unkillable, so you have to watch for that. if you are on PC best bet is to just get the newest game (this series tends to die a lot faster on PC), but if on console:īlack Ops 3: fantastic game mechanically and in terms of balance. Pretty much every game has some downsides, even if you back several years.