Highlights

  • Remnant 2 improves on the first game's visuals, offering a unique and stunning experience that sets it apart from its predecessor.
  • The game's multiverse structure introduces a variety of imaginative and diverse worlds, moving away from the typical post-apocalyptic setting found in many other games.
  • Remnant 2 establishes its own identity in the Soulslike genre with its use of a fixed camera angle and a third-person perspective, creating a visually appealing and unique gameplay experience.

While not a pure Soulslike, Remnant 2 advances the ideas established by its predecessor in nearly every way to make good on the "Dark Souls with guns" comparison that many made regarding Remnant: From The Ashes. A skillful blend of co-op shooter and challenging, methodical Soulslike, Remnant 2 is the best kind of video game sequel -- one that takes all the highlights of the first game in a series and improves them with skillful iteration without fixing what isn't broken. Perhaps one of the standout features of the title is its unique aesthetic and massive visual upgrade over the first game.

Anyone who spent time with Remnant: From The Ashes would likely point out that the visuals, while serviceable, were not anything to write home about. Between some flat textures and same-y environments, Remnant leaned more on its gameplay than its visual aesthetic to establish its unique identity. With the benefit of Remnant 2 releasing on advanced hardware and not attempting a cross-gen launch, Gunfire Games has been able to craft not only a unique take on Soulslike gameplay, but also a wholly original feast for the eyes where boilerplate "post-apocalyptic Earth" gives way to some truly imaginative spectacle.

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Remnant 2's Multiverse Structure Creates Some Amazing Worlds

Remnant 2 - Playing With Full Lobby Running Towards Fog Door

At this point, many gamers are likely tired of games that take place in a post-apocalyptic setting. To say that the post-apocalypse has (ironically) been done to death is somewhat of an understatement given how many titles use the downfall of humanity as their starting point. Much like the first game, the hub area in Remnant 2 puts players into a setting that is all too familiar: the ramshackle remains of Earth following some cataclysmic, civilization-decimating event. But, once players make first contact with the World Stone, all bets are off.

The first Remnant 2 world that players get transported to as part of the main narrative is different for each player, but regardless of where they land they'll be in for a spectacle. One world might be choked with overgrowth of The Root alongside Swiss Family Robinson-style tree-dwellings and looming temples, while another is a futuristic wasteland dotted with strange geometric architecture and giant sentient robots that wouldn't be out of place in The Matrix. Considering that most Soulslikes to this point have opted for either a dark fantasy setting reminiscent of Dark Souls, the sheer variety of worlds on offer in Remnant 2 immediately sets it apart from its inspirations and contemporaries.

Between its Camera and Visuals, Remnant 2 Carves its Own Soulslike Identity

Remnant 2 hound-like creature encounter

Another aspect of Remnant 2's presentation that gives it its own identity in the crowded Soulslike subgenre is its use of a fixed camera angle. Cameras have often been one of the few sticking points for fans of Soulslikes, as a finicky camera can make or break a player's success during the most tense encounters. With the occasional need to lock-on and rotate the camera as players engage in trading blows with enemies, the use of a fixed camera isn't exclusive to Remnant 2, but it is one of the very few Soulslikes that employs a fixed perspective for players.

Using the same "over-the-shoulder" third-person perspective popularized by Resident Evil 4, Remnant 2 sticks to the co-op shooter side of its identity in its perspective and presentation, creating a unique Soulslike experience in the process. Between its place as one of the few games in the subgenre that uses a fixed camera angle, and its imaginative and varied environments, Remnant 2 has a visual identity all its own. The game is a considerable visual upgrade over its predecessor, and it's nice to be able to say that Remnant 2 looks as good as it plays.

Remnant 2 is available now for PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S.

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