

The moments where Nate doesn’t have his father figure and friend with him make him and the player feel all the more vulnerable. In many ways it makes it more compelling than 2 – Elena is a fine character, but Sully and Nate get on like a house on fire, firing constant wisecracks between one another but always having each others backs.

It makes this game Nate’s most personal yet if Uncharted 2 was the game where Nate realises how much he needs Elena, this is the game where he shows just how much he relies on and loves Sully. Interspersed with this are scenes and sequences where we see Nate as a teenager, letting us see how he met Sully and started on his path of treasure hunting, as well as explaining why Marlowe has such a vendetta against him. Nate follows clues left not only by Sir Francis Drake, but myriad historical figures and groups, from archaeologist and military diplomat Lawrence of Arabia to John Dee, Elizabeth I’s personal astrologer and occult philosopher all were in possession of fragments of clues leading to Iram, and Nate hurries to put them all together before Marlowe.

The prize Marlowe is after, and therefore which Nate is also after, is the location of the lost city Ubar, also known as Iram of the Pillars. I guess it’s some evil MI5, judging on the looks, the sardonic British drawl everyone speaks in, and their love affair with shooting Nate and his friends with hallucinogenic darts to spark up some new madcap sequence. She’s evil, that much is obvious, given she wants Nate dead if only to nick his ring, and she’s in charge of some vast organization of suited chaps who fan out across the world in search of artifacts to pilfer. Together their stunt draws out Marlowe, a… well, I dunno what she is frankly. It was all a setup, orchestrated by him and his longtime mentor and friend Sully, along with Chloe fresh from the previous game and new face Cutter, your standard London gangster type, straight off the set of Snatch (complete with wryly delivered literary putdowns against the fumbling Sully and what seems to be a functionally illiterate Drake, unless it concerns reading ancient scripts, of which he is the undisputed master). Genre: Action-Adventure, Third-Person Shooterĭrake is not dead, of course (spoilers). Released Nov 2011 | Developed: Naughty Dog | Published: Sony
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Uncharted 3: Drake’s Deception (PS3, PS4 )
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Oh Naughty Dog, you don’t half know how to make openings. Uncharted 2 saw Drake bleeding out and hanging on for dear life as the wreck of the train he was in tumbles down the Himalayas, and Uncharted 3 leaves him shot and dead on the streets of London as some evil suited group drive off with his heirloom ring. I feel like the openings of the two Uncharted sequels are all but written just for me.
