The violence in Devil’s Third rightly earns the game one of the few mature ratings on the Wii U.

This week, Zero Punctuation reviews Devil's Third.

Devil's Third: The Kotaku Review By Keza MacDonald on at Probably the only thing that most people know about Devil’s Third is that it’s been in development for an unusually long time.

18:30 - SOD Soldiers Unit ... Game Informations: Title: Devil's Third Developers: Valhalla Game Studios, Nintendo SPD Publishers: Nintendo (Wii U), Valhalla Game Studios (PC) Many SOD Soldiers assisted the Poison Gas Soldiers in the assault on Panama Canal. However, when the same organization began to knock out the world's satellite systems, he is given a chance at redemption by hunting down his former colleagues for the US Government. Reading what I just wrote, Devil’s Third sounds like it has a fairly interesting narrative.Unfortunately, the execution of the game is both extraordinarily over-the-top and too serious for its own good.

Devil’s Third had me both hyped and worried. Devil's Third is a third-person action game for the Wii U developed by Valhalla Game Studios. Devil’s Third casts you in the role of Ivan, a bald, tattooed Russian ex-terrorist who is serving an 850 year sentence in Guantanamo Bay (yes, really). There are … On every level bar one, Devil’s Third is a trainwreck of a game. Ivan (or Ivan the Terrible) is a former terrorist who left his organization, the School of Democracy, after seeing too many innocent civilians caught in the mix. A successful mix of first …

On every level bar one, Devil’s Third is a trainwreck of a game. SOD Soldiers are enemies and the most common infantry of the S.O.D. They could be seen killing various Green Berets by shooting them or slicing them with their Machetes.

Glitches aside, Devil's Third follows the template of every low-rent military action game released in the wake of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare. Hyped enough to put it on my Top 5 Most Anticipated Games list last year, but worried enough that it would be terrible thanks to its overly long development cycle, among other things.

From a core design perspective, it simply doesn’t work.

Devil's Third was recently featured in the August 7th edition of the Japanese gaming magazine "Weekly Famitsu." I didn't, because I spent part of them playing Devil's Third, at least I think I did.

From a core design perspective, it simply doesn’t work.

Well I hope we all had some nice holidays.

Probably the only thing that most people know about Devil’s Third is that it’s been in development for an unusually long time. It is exploitatively graphic and mind-numbingly dumb. Tier: Probably 9-B, higher with Enbaku, possibly 9-A