Horizon Forbidden West
By Chad Sapieha,
Common Sense Media Reviewer
Common Sense Media Reviewers
Epic action game has a mighty female hero and timely themes.
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Horizon Forbidden West
Community Reviews
Based on 6 parent reviews
Positive messages, gorgeous world, thrilling gameplay, appropriate for young teens.
Great game for 11 and up
What’s It About?
Aloy is charged once again with saving humanity in HORIZON FORBIDDEN WEST, sequel to the PlayStation-exclusive sci-fi saga Horizon Zero Dawn. The story picks up with Aloy, a clone of a woman who existed a millennium in the past -- just before machines wiped out all life on Earth -- discovering that the planet isn't yet out of the woods. Machine-driven environmental catastrophe is mere months away, and the only way to stave off the disaster is for her to search for the solution in the Forbidden West, a place few Easterners have gone because of the powerful local tribes that control the region. As players explore these sprawling, free-to-roam lands, they'll meet and befriend plenty of people who need help in tasks such as feeding their villages, quashing a murderous rebellion, and facing down the menacing threat of massive machine animals that have lately grown aggressive. Aloy also collects and crafts upgrades for a variety of armors and weapons, each with strategic advantages that allow her to more effectively hunt machines by exploiting elemental weaknesses. She'll also target specific weak spots to gradually remove plating, weapons, and components over the course of tense and epic confrontations. Between battles, the world offers a plethora of ancient ruins to explore, contextual puzzles to solve, and fragments of data to find that paint a clearer picture of the final days before machines ended the world. Players can expect to spend at least 50 hours and potentially upwards of 100 exploring everything that Forbidden West has to offer.
Is It Any Good?
Sequels don't get much better than this. Horizon Forbidden West puts the franchise's captivating sci-fi story front and center, further exploring this new civilization of humans grown from stored DNA following the eradication of all biomass on Earth. It expands on the original's fascinating premise, including ideas hinted at but not fully explored in the first game, such as what mysteries may lie in the far west and what really happened to that mysterious project to send humanity to another star system. The result is a gripping adventure that sees Aloy searching for answers and making some shocking discoveries along the way. She remains a beautifully realized character: fierce, intelligent, and physically capable, but with a reasonable amount of self-doubt as well as some minor character flaws that only make her more human -- like her deep-seated obsession with her mission that allies sometimes misinterpret as a coldness. Players will become invested in her as a character, fearing for her physical and emotional well-being in tense situations, basking in the praise she receives from those she helps, and laughing along when she cracks the occasional joke. This is large-scale storytelling and world-building at its best, anchored by one of the most likable and fully developed characters in modern games.
That the rest of the experience is a match for the narrative is just a bonus. The visual presentation is simply jaw-dropping, with light from vivid, living skies flowing over mountains and filtering through the branches of towering redwoods to the landscape below, which is filled with fields of flowers, moss-covered ruins, and orange desert dunes dotted with dust devils. This setting is a luscious backdrop for the wildly intense and strategic combat, which only gets better as you learn to use all of the many traps, weapons, combinations, and elemental abilities at Aloy's disposal. The satisfaction that comes with anchoring a giant machine bird to the ground with a ropecaster, blowing off its armor plating with precision arrows, soaking it in acid with slingshot bombs to weaken it, and then letting another bird you've overridden swoop in to peck it to death is tangible. It's not a perfect game -- most players will reach Aloy's level cap well before the story's end, scaling walls and cliffs can be a little awkward at times, and the occasional glitch might pull players out of this grand fantasy for a couple of seconds here and there -- but these problems barely dent the overall vibe. Horizon Forbidden West is a magnificently ambitious follow-up that somehow manages to outdo its much beloved predecessor in almost every way.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about screen time. Horizon Forbidden West is a huge game in which it's easy to lose oneself for long periods of time. How long do you usually play before getting up and taking a break to engage in more physical activities?
Does Aloy buck female stereotypes or fit how we're used to seeing women portrayed in media? Can you draw real-world comparisons to the differing ways in which Horizon Forbidden West's Carja and Tenakth tribes treat women?
Game Details
- Platforms: PlayStation 5 , PlayStation 4
- Pricing structure: Paid
- Available online?: Available online
- Publisher: Sony Interactive Entertainment
- Release date: February 18, 2022
- Genre: Action/Adventure
- Topics: Adventures , Robots , Science and Nature , Wild Animals
- Character Strengths: Courage , Integrity
- ESRB rating: T for Blood, Language, Use of Alcohol, Violence
- Award: Common Sense Selection
- Last updated: August 7, 2022
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