After the initial success of Ratchet and Clank, a sequel was to be expected but keeping the qualities that were successful, changing the ones that weren't, and creating a new experience can be difficult to achieve. Many sequels fail in one or more of these areas and never reach the success the original enjoyed. Ratchet and Clank: Going Commando however, has managed to recapture the essence of the original while offering new capabilities and features that may give Jak II a significant challenge for best platform game this year.
Ratchet and Clank: Going Commando picks up where the original finished as a more mature Ratchet and Clank have been basically killing time waiting for the next job to come in. One finally does come in obviously and they take off in an effort to recover a stolen prototype. The story line, although not incredibly strong, does put our heroes through interesting situations and allows enough flexibility for the gameplay to standout.
The gameplay is one of the stronger aspects with a number of enhancements that improve on the original design. There are twenty levels to work through each with a handful of mission objectives and different planets can be flown to even if your current mission objectives aren't complete. A few RPG features are mixed in as well with Ratchet and Clank's aspects improving as they progress in addition to being able to purchase upgrades to armor, weapons, and their ship. The weapons take particular advantage of RPG aspects as they each have an upgrade potential that can be realized when used enough.
Ratchet & Clank: Into the Nexus is a 2013 stage computer game created by Insomniac Games and distributed by Sony Computer Entertainment for the PlayStation 3.It is the fourth and last portion “Later on” arrangement. The arrangement is noted for the incorporation of outlandish and novel areas and over the top devices, an idea of the customary Ratchet and Clank encounter, that profits in.
To complement the gameplay, the graphics once again deliver a strong performance adding more detail to an already great looking game. In addition, many platform games fail to deliver enough diversity in environments and enemies but Ratchet and Clank: Going Commando have numerous environments and multiple different enemies throughout the game to keep it from becoming stale.
Ratchet and Clank: Going Commando creates and experience that in many ways is superior to the original. With larger levels, RPG elements, and all around improved gameplay there will be few platform games that will perform at this level. Any fan of platform games or those just looking for an entertaining game should give this one a shot.