

Elias Toufexis does a fantastic job as Adam Jensen and his guttural growl is accompanied by a truly well-defined personality. The real heart of the story is Adam Jensen and his story arc. Thankfully, cybernetic technology has evolved a bit since the 1980s and he isn’t a Frankenstein’s monster. Not to spoil beyond the opening mission but cybernetic terrorists attack Sarif Industries, seemingly kill Adam’s girlfriend, and leave him in a ruined state like Robocop. Adam doesn’t entirely approve of this practice but joins because a job is a job and his girlfriend is one of their chief designers. Even better, they would pay through the nose for these options. Sarif Industries is a cybernetics firm that began creating prosthetics for those who had lost limbs in accidents but soon made billions due to the realization that people would replace perfectly healthy limbs or organs for better performing ones. Adam is a former SWAT officer that was caught up in a rare moment of police controversy: he was reprimanded for not shooting a minority under dubious circumstances. The protagonist, Adam Jensen, is the head of security for Sarif Industries in a recently economically revived Detroit. The premise is that the world has undergone a “New Renaissance” with technology having advanced by leaps and bounds while wealth inequality has become an even worse issue. Human Revolution is a prequel to Deus Ex (2000) but serves as a standalone as well.
#Deus ex human revolution Pc#
What made Human Revolution so great, though? Does it still hold up today? Is it worth playing on PC or digital download? The answer is yes but we’ll also talk about more than just gameplay.

Nevertheless, it is a game that remains, like its predecessor, one of the best cyberpunk works that has ever been created and should be given the accolades it deserves. Deus Ex: Human Revolution is a game that deserves a great deal of attention even if it is a seventh-generation console title that is in danger of being left in the dust.
