Skip to main content

Have You Played... Attack On Titan: Wings Of Freedom?

Kill naked giants

Have You Played? is an endless stream of game retrospectives. One a day, every day, perhaps for all time.

Attack On Titan: Wings of Freedom [official site] is a solid 7/10 kind of game, but its concepts and combat are unusual enough that I find myself thinking about it a lot more than other, better games. In short: Attack on Titan is Spider-Man vs. Godzilla in an open world with destructible buildings.

The game is based on the Attack On Titan anime. Set in a fantasy world where humanity has been nearly wiped out by the presence of enormous, naked, occasionally skinless giants called Titans, you're part of a military squad in the last human city. To fight back against the Titans, you're given twin grappling hooks, a jetpack of sorts, and a pair of swords with which to cut off their limbs and stab at their weak spots.

All of these things are a thrill to use in tandem. You connect the grapples to buildings and use the jetpack to build momentum, and once I got good, I could traverse the length of large urban areas without once touching the ground. I'd bound across the city, get close enough to a Titan that I could use the grapple to latch onto them while still in mid-air, and after lining up an attack, trigger the jetpack to dash in and slice off an arm or a leg. Taking out a leg causes the Titan to fall over, of course, and if they land on a building then that building crumples beneath them. It's spectacular.

The fighting wears thin before the end of the game, it's graphically rudimentary, and the plot - which follows the anime exactly - is of little interest beyond the core concept. But what a concept.

Read this next

Graham Smith avatar
Graham Smith: Rock Paper Shotgun's editorial leader, corporate dad, and breezy evening news writer.
View comments (18)
In this article

Attack on Titan

Xbox One, PS3, PlayStation Vita, PC

Related topics

Rock Paper Shotgun is better when you sign in

Sign in and join us on our journey to discover strange and compelling PC games.