

THere’s nothing particularly new here if you’re familiar with Watch Dogs: Legion’s side quests. Bloodline has its own host of side quests, locked to your choice of Aiden or Wrench.


Of course, there’s more to do than just plough through the story. His kit’s way more focused on getting out of fights, but that doesn’t mean he doesn’t have his own guns and melee weapons for when the going gets tough. Meanwhile Wrench adopts skills from my favorite classes in Legion by being able to summon a drone. Aiden plays way more like a character from the original Watch Dogs, having a much more combat-oriented kit with the ability to just disable electronics and slow down time to focus on shooting. On top of that, Aiden and Wrench have their own separate loadouts, playing differently from each other. Bringing The best of all the games into Legion not only gives us a chance to hang out with these characters again, but also has an added bonus- thanks to Legion’s premise, there’s a lack of any real strong characters, since you’re controlling what would otherwise be background NPCs.
Watch dogs legion ps5 review series#
Personally, I really dig it- Watch Dogs is a series that’s had an identity crisis since its inception- at first it was just a GTA clone with a hacker filter over it, before writing more fleshed out characters in 2 and then really locking down its gameplay with Legion. You’re also introduced to another character, Jackson, who you can play as for a little bit, but for the most part Bloodline focuses on the exploits of Aiden and Wrench, and you can even still play as them after finishing the main story. Follow us on Twitter Follow and Tweet us Tweet to plot’s pretty standard for fans of crossover movies- Aiden and Wrench start off opposing each other, but after some twists in the story they work together to take down a tech mogul for their own totally valid reasons.
