

MEDAL OF HONOR ABOVE AND BEYOND FULL
Maps are also small and confined, which I heard other players complain loudly about often. Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond is a 2020 first-person shooter virtual reality game developed by Respawn Entertainment and published by Electronic Arts. Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond offers a fun and lengthy single player campaign with lots of replayability alongside a full featured suite of multiplayer modes. Stuttering and rubber-banding are an issue, as well as a less-than-optimal frame rate during crowded moments. I found them reasonably enjoyable, but there are definitely still bugs to iron out. There are Multiplayer modes as well, and unlike some Oculus games I’ve played recently, they’re actually well-populated. That’s not even mentioning the bugs, which cause fallen enemies to sometimes twitch after death, and annoyingly, allow many a German shooter to hit you from behind walls.

That, combined with sparsely-detailed environments, can give Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond’s missions a slightly artificial feel, as of a Westworld-esque amusement park shooting gallery (but an admittedly fun one). Honestly, at times it’s immersion-breaking. But other assets, like plants and scenery, are, at their worst, PS3 era bad. Character models aren’t too bad, although their uncanny-valley eyes were distracting. Despite the latest-gen-like file size, Medal of Honor: Above and Beyond’s visuals aren’t a strength.
