![homefront the revolution homefront the revolution](https://images.wallpapersden.com/image/download/homefront-the-revolution-2020_a25qZ2aUmZqaraWkpJRmZ21lrWdmZ2U.jpg)
While the KPA presence is still heavy, players will run into resistance troops, weapon caches, and traps set up to take out enemy patrols.
HOMEFRONT THE REVOLUTION FULL
The Red Zone is the bombed-out suburban area of Philadelphia that is full of ruins and rubble it is also where the resistance is at its strongest. Power and water are intermittent and overpopulation has forced people into slum-like tent cities. The cluttered city streets are awash with patrols, scanner drones, and ever-watching cameras.
![homefront the revolution homefront the revolution](https://www.mobygames.com/images/covers/l/375102-homefront-the-revolution-revolutionary-spirit-pack-playstation-4-front-cover.jpg)
Patrols happen frequently and it is very difficult for the rebels to navigate. The second district is the Yellow Zone, which is the ghetto area where most of the population live. The Green Zone is the affluent area where at the center of the city the KPA is at its strongest, they are also where the invaders are at their most comfortable: they have running water, a stable power supply, and their fortifications make green zones one of the safest places in the city. Philadelphia is split into three districts. Another new feature introduced is the enhanced ability to modify weapons such as adding a fore-grip or a sight in the middle of a firefight or to convert a rifle to a Light Machine Gun and vice versa. There are side missions where the player will be called off to carry out tasks like assassinating a high-ranking KPA general or steal a KPA drone. The Korean People's Army (KPA) weapons are all fingerprint-locked and as such they have a sizeable advantage over the resistance. The player can scavenge for supplies to modify weapons and equipment. Homefront: The Revolution is a first-person shooter game set in an open world environment with many districts to explore. Homefront: The Revolution received mixed reviews upon release, with critics mostly praising the open world and weapon customization system, while criticizing the narrative, characters, and gunplay, as well as the technical issues for hampering the overall experience. Homefront: The Revolution takes place in 2029 in an alternate timeline, following the protagonist Ethan Brady as he stages a resistance movement against the army of a North Korean occupation in the city of Philadelphia. It really just needed to be stripped down so it was a nice quick romp through a short and sweet story and some things to make clearing out enemy camps more interesting (possibly better stealth mechanics) and you'd have had a solid game.Game Review Homefront: The Revolution is a first-person shooter video game developed by Dambuster Studios and published by Deep Silver for Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. The difficulty was either too easy on easier difficulties and frustratingly quick to die on harder, the story and characters are laughable and very few missions were interesting, it just didn't have enough to keep me engaged for too long. That being said that can only take you so far, i played a lot for like a day but pretty soon the outposts became pretty same-y, even Far Cry has more interesting 'clear out enemy encampments' varieties and strategies. The good weapon variety allowing for different approaches and the customization is really fun. I really love games that have an occupied map that you have to slowly take over and throw out the bad guys, in that respect I really loved exploring the map, the occupied near-future US is an interesting setting and tackling the outposts and taking over districts in different ways is a really fun way to have combat engagements as it feels like you're accomplishing something not just killing mindless AI just to get to the next part. So yeah, not really getting the hate at all. I really feel a sense of accomplishment when a district that's 100% under the control of the enemy becomes liberated over the course of a few in-game days. As you sabotage things and establish outposts, the people start to get more bold and begin to rise up against the enemy to the point where a once clean and orderly street is full of burning dumpsters and people assaulting enemy troops in plain sight. I especially like the "yellow" zones, where the people are under intense surveillance and harassed by the military. Personally I think it's awesome going around liberating places, establishing bases, and watching the resistance gain strength. Yeah, it is, but that would only be a problem to me if the activities in the game weren't fun. The big complaint I've seen so far is that the game is repetitive. I really don't understand why it got bad reviews.
![homefront the revolution homefront the revolution](https://cdn.ndtv.com/tech/gadgets/homefront_the_revolution_keyart.jpg)
The game seems a bit short but it's a lot of fun. I just started playing it yesterday and I've made some good progress in the game so far, having liberated around 5 zones.