Call of Duty: Black Ops 4 is a thoroughly modern take on the Call of Duty series
Call of Duty goes fully multiplayer, with extra focus on PC.
This article was originally published in PC Gamer issue 319. For more quality articles about all things PC gaming, you can subscribe now in the UK and the US.
The rumours are true: the traditional Call of Duty singleplayer campaign is dead. There’s no lavish, indulgent six-hour collection of cinematic story missions in Black Ops 4. Now the story is threaded into multiplayer, the mode that, let’s be honest, is the real reason that fans of the series keep buying it year after year. It’s a bold, and perhaps inevitable, move by developer Treyarch, but for the veteran Call of Duty studio it’s just another way of telling a story.
“If you’ve been following the Black Ops series, you’ll know that we never tell a story the same way twice,” says co-studio head Dan Bunting. “In the first game, your companion throughout the campaign was a figment of your imagination. In the second game, we told a branching story. And in Black Ops 3 the whole thing was all in the main character’s head. So we’ve always experimented with telling stories in different ways.”
It’s also clear that Treyarch knows the time and money it spends making a Call of Duty campaign, versus the time players actually spend playing it, doesn’t quite balance out. “We’re putting a lot more energy into the parts of the game where our players spend the most time,” says Bunting. “When you think of Treyarch you think of Zombies and multiplayer, so those are the parts of Black Ops that we want to bring to the forefront.”
Black Ops has always felt separate from the rest of the Call of Duty series and I ask Bunting what he thinks sets it apart. “We’ve carved out our own identity in the series,” he says. “Players love how we interact with them as a community and how we give them strong, connected social experiences.” But with such a vast, vocal and enthusiastic community, how do you filter out the noise? “Listening to the community takes a lot of patience and understanding,” says Bunting. “If anyone expresses an opinion, even if it’s negative, you know it’s coming from a place of passion. And we’re constantly updating the game based on player feedback, so being tight with the community helps with that.”
Treyarch is investing significant time and effort into the PC version of Black Ops 4, with help from development studio Beenox. “The PC team alone is eight to ten times larger than anything we’ve done before,” says Bunting. “It’s a dedicated effort. We truly want to make a game that makes Call of Duty a significant experience on PC and makes Black Ops something people trust and love and keep coming back to.”
Battle station
The PC version will have support for HDR, native 4K and ultra-wide monitors. The combat has been tweaked to accommodate a mouse and keyboard (for instance, a faster, snappier camera while using one of your character’s special abilities). Black Ops 4 will also be joining Destiny 2 as the second non-Blizzard game to find a home on the Battle.net online service. It’s nice to see Treyarch ensuring the PC version is up to scratch; it will have to be if the studio wants this to be a game which people play for years to come. With so many great competitive online games available on PC right now, some of which don’t cost anything to play, Treyarch has a tough fight ahead of it.
The biggest gaming news, reviews and hardware deals
Keep up to date with the most important stories and the best deals, as picked by the PC Gamer team.
Perhaps the most significant, and least surprising, new addition to the series is Blackout. Yes, it’s a battle royale mode, taking place on a map Treyarch describes as being a thousand times larger than a regular multiplayer map. How do you translate the fast, claustrophobic combat associated with Call of Duty to such a huge expanse? “It’s been a different and new challenge,” says Bunting. “But as we’ve been working on it, we’ve have a lot of ideas and cross-pollination between different parts of the game. We’ve brought stuff to multiplayer that we learned making Blackout, and vice versa.
“Investment in the weapon systems is important in Black Ops, but especially in a survival mode like Blackout that’s played on a massive scale. You have to think about how the weapons perform in a different way. Bullet drop and bullet travel time are things we’ve never had to consider in Call of Duty before. But in terms of the actual core combat loop, everything you love and know about that tight Black Ops gunplay and the feel of movement is all just as relevant in Blackout as it is in competitive multiplayer.”
Blackout will feature land, sea and air vehicles, and will incorporate weapons, abilities and characters from the series’ history—including Mason, Reznov and the cast of the Zombies mode. I like the idea of these different universes colliding, although Blackout is clearly early in development. Treyarch had nothing to show me besides a teaser trailer, and it’s unclear how it plans to make its mark on the battle royale genre. It promises the team is doing battle royale “the Black Ops way”, which doesn’t really mean anything, but gives a sense that perhaps it wants to shake the format up a bit to stand out from the crowd.
As for traditional multiplayer, Treyarch has introduced a couple of new features that could have a significant impact on the way the game flows. Call of Duty multiplayer is famously chaotic and hectic, but Black Ops 4 could be a bit more forgiving for less twitchy players who care more about teamwork than kills. “We want to celebrate the fact there are roles that people play,” says Bunting. “In past games it’s been a passive thing. You got the camper, the slayer, the OBJ [objective] player. But people love to play support if they don’t have the best gun skill. And as designers we want to validate and support all different playstyles.”
You’ll no longer magically heal when you crouch behind cover. Instead, you have to patch yourself up manually, which seems like a small thing, but makes Black Ops 4 feel markedly different from previous Call of Duty games minute-to-minute. A fog of war system has also been introduced, which will quietly force players to work together. “Situational awareness is an important part of our game,” says Bunting. “Weapons, movement and health are your fundamentals, but you also have to be aware of what’s going on around you. And the fog of war system has opened up a whole new dimension of competitive play.
“You’re looking to your teammates a lot more, because they can reveal enemy positions,” Bunting continues. “So you’re no longer just looking at the minimap for what’s relevant to you, but what your teammates are doing as well. This builds teamwork without forcing it on people, which was another one of our goals. We wanted to combat toxicity in the community by designing systems that make teamwork stronger. Whatever you do to help yourself will ultimately make your team better, and that should make for a more pleasant online experience.”
Go ballistic
There have also been some fundamental changes to the combat that most players won’t notice, unless they’re particularly invested in the game. Ballistics have been overhauled, including things like 3D tracer fire and recoil patterns that aren’t random, but can be learned. “When you introduce randomness, that just leads to frustration,” says Bunting. “When a gun has a recoil pattern that’s completely random, you feel like ‘I missed that guy, but why?’ And that’s frustrating, because you can’t really learn from that mistake to get better. So we want all the systems in Black Ops 4 to be learnable, so players can master them, and we want the journey to mastery to feel rewarding.”
I also found it interesting how Treyarch opened its Black Ops 4 reveal by telling the amassed fans and press that wallrunning and jump jets have been removed from the game. The elated cheers from the fans and pro players in the crowd suggests this is something people are glad to see the back of, and it’s a frank admission from Treyarch that it didn’t really work. “Boots on the ground” was mentioned a lot and the developer also showed off the fact that your gun is always up and ready to fire, even when you’re throwing grenades and mantling over obstacles, which was met with a similarly positive response. Changes like this won’t mean much to casual Call of Duty players, but for the lifers who play nothing else, they’re tweaks that are both major and welcome.
Specialists return to Black Ops 4, each offering a unique way to play the game. Fans of the series will recognise some favourites sitting alongside the fresh faces. I enjoyed the new take on beard-and-tattoo aficionado Ruin, who can now zip around the map with a grappling hook. It feels very much like Treyarch’s take on Widowmaker from Overwatch’s similar ability, and I loved using it to grapple away from trouble when I was near death as the enemy looked on hopelessly. It’s elements like this that makes Black Ops 4 feel much more dynamic and fun than previous Call of Duty multiplayer offerings, and it feels like the Treyarch team has been playing plenty of Rainbow Six Siege and Overwatch for design inspiration.
As for the new operatives, they’re an interesting bunch. “Torque is an expert in lane control,” explains Bunting. “He can drop a barricade anywhere in the environment and use it as portable cover. But where it’s most effective is blocking lanes. It’s a sort of active denial system, creating heat and distortion effects for players who come near it. He also has razor wire that you can use more frequently. Players can walk through it, but it does damage and slows them down significantly. He brings a layer of tactics to the game that are all about controlling lanes and controlling the fl ow of a match.
“Ajax is the shield guy. He’s essentially a movable piece of cover, and when he gets his shield out he’s a force to be reckoned with for anyone on the other side of it. He has a little gun port that he can fire safely from, and he can wreck the place with that. He also has a nine-bang fl ash grenade, and the longer you cook it, the longer it fl ashes. So you can blind the enemy team, then your teammates can come in and use you for cover.
“Recon is our situational awareness master. He has abilities called Sensor Dart and Vision Pulse that reveal the locations of enemies to the whole team. Then there’s Crash, the combat medic. He can heal and buff his teammates, and he’s a good example of how we’re not forcing teamwork, but helping players help each other. Everything you do benefits you, but if you do it well, you also benefit everyone else."
Dead shot
Finally, yes, Zombies mode is back. What began as a bonus extra in the first Black Ops has become an elaborate, fully-featured mode with its own pulpy mythology, and Black Ops 4 will tell a new story in this universe. The game will come with three missions involving time travel, seeing the four new heroes hopping from what looks like Ancient Rome to being aboard the Titanic before it slams into an iceberg. The fusion of real history and occult mythology should provide a compelling backdrop for all the zombie slaying.
The over-the-top, grindhouse-inspired tone from previous games is firmly intact in this new tale, and it’s so different from the macho military feel of the rest of Black Ops that it almost feels like a separate game. As stylish as this all is, however, Treyarch has yet to reveal any concrete info about how the new Zombies mode actually plays, or how different it’ll be from previous iterations. I do like the sound of the new customisation options, which let you create custom matches to share and play online, adjusting how the zombies behave: their speed, health, aggression level and so on. ‘Replayability’ is one of Treyarch’s favourite buzzwords, and customisation like this is a part of achieving that goal.
Black Ops 4 doubling down on multiplayer is completely unsurprising. Some will miss the traditional, linear campaign, but most of the fanbase won’t care. Treyarch is clear that it wants this to be an ongoing game-as-a-service, retaining players for several years. Its success on PC is an unknown quantity, especially with games like Overwatch to contend with, but it’s good to see Treyarch dedicating itself to making the Windows version of the game as good as it possibly can be.
If it’s set in space, Andy will probably write about it. He loves sci-fi, adventure games, taking screenshots, Twin Peaks, weird sims, Alien: Isolation, and anything with a good story.