
The game has fully realised environments from the series and character models that are instantly recognisable. The game does a fantastic job of replicating the visual stylings of the anime series.

Then there is no real reason to drive onwards beside the story that the game relies on heavily.

You just learn these skills and they become just another move in your repertoire. Plus, the unique moves are given early within the game and with little context. It’s good that the game has varied combat moves and animations but they are without any substance to make the effort worthwhile. It’s one of those titles where you could play with your index finger and tap buttons at random to succeed. However, the combat rarely feels nuanced for fully fleshed out. The game allows you to control the four key characters within the series main party and grants you unique fighting styles, weapons and special moves.

However, there is a real problem with pacing within the title that makes all this decent storytelling fall flat. The game has a plot and varied side quests that will hold your attention and have you doing good deeds for those that you encounter, much like the actual show. Although it’s not a straight lift from the show, the events have their roots within the narrative, with the fire benders being the antagonists and the water nation being the allies. Firstly, the story for this title is one that will be familiar to fans of the series. Still, it should be interesting to see how well the eco-conscious sci-fi franchise translates to a video game.One thing this game does brilliantly is sticking religiously to the source material provided by the animated series. The game will no doubt be part of the hype campaign for that movie release. Cameron's repeatedly delayed Avatar sequels should arrive starting December 16th, 2022. The Avatar title will take advantage of the newest version of Ubisoft's Snowdrop engine, and it's clear that will involve a lot of visual detail befitting James Cameron's CG world. Not surprisingly, you'll have to deal with both the planet's wildlife as well as the human RDA forces determined to exploit the world for all it's worth. There isn't much to say about the plot of the first-person action game at this point, but you'll play as a Na'vi traveling across the "never-before-seen" Western Frontier of Pandora. Yes, that's right - unlike some of Ubi's other recent games, there won't be versions for last-gen consoles. The game publisher has revealed that Massive Entertainment's newly-named Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora will be available on PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/ S, PC, Luna and Stadia sometime in 2022. Ubisoft's Avatar game is finally starting to take shape.
