Rest assured that Ethan is the same, albeit more sarcastic, bitter and badass than ever before.
Players who have played Bloodshot's predecessor may notice that Ethan has taken on an entirely different look graphically and may not even appear to be the same character.
You get to do all of this, and you're considered the "good guy."Īs the player, you once again take the role of Ethan Thomas, a washed-up yet respected special agent who is continuing a strange battle with his own inner demons while drowning his sorrows in alcohol. At certain points in this insanely horrific, blood-soaked, first-person psychological thriller, you can smash homeless people's heads into television sets or arcade cabinets, decorate by hanging modern art (i.e., impale a loony man on a precisely positioned piece of rebar), give the ultimate swirly by drowning a foe in fecal matter left in a toilet bowl, and even crush the heads of victims in a massive vise. However, if kicking and pounding your fists into a guy's face until blood gushes like Old Faithful from every orifice sounds like fun, then this game is right up your twisted alley. If you're partial to games that involve collecting rings and avoiding cartoon baddies, then Bloodshot is probably not for you. Bloodshot features bigger and badder enemies, next-gen graphics, semi-interactive environments, tons of new weapons, a new combo fighting system, totally new online play, and more blood and gore than a Rob Zombie film. From the demented minds at Monolith comes Condemned 2: Bloodshot, a blood-drenched nightmare that's the sequel to one of the most popular psychological thrillers of all time, Condemned: Criminal Origins.