Isonzo review | PC Gamer

25
isonzo


NEED TO KNOW

What is it? A Battlefield-like FPS with the bones of a milsim
Expect to pay $30/£20
Developer BlackMill Games
Publisher M2H
Reviewed on RTX 3060, Ryzen 7 5700G 3.8Ghz, 16GB RAM
Multiplayer? 48 players
Link Official site (opens in new tab)

I continue to be delighted by how many cool military sim games are around these days. If I want to enlist in a virtually authentic land war in 2022, the choices are overwhelming: Last I counted there are two major modern milsims, three set in WW2 (if you count the top-down MMO Foxhole), and four in WW1. Don’t look now, but I think we’re in a milsim boom. 

Developer Blackmill Games was early to gaming’s interest in the Great War with Verdun in 2013. Its latest, Isonzo, is the third in the series, and by far its best. Not only is it one of the prettiest shooters around right now, but it’s also the easiest to just hop into a match and play. Isonzo walks a fine line between simulation and videogamey convenience. It’s not nearly as punishing or complex as another WWI favorite of mine, Beyond The Wire, but it’s way more difficult than anything with the name Battlefield on the box.

The nebulous middle ground where Isonzo lives had me wondering who exactly it’s for. At first I resented Isonzo for being too simple, but as the hours went on I realized I was playing it in much longer sittings than I can usually stomach a milsim. It’s fun, it’s difficult, but it’s also totally accessible. I’m starting to think Blackmill has made the first milsim I’ll actually keep installed for more than a few weeks.

(Image credit: Blackmill Games)

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