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KitGuru Games: The evolution of Borderlands

The Borderlands series pretty much invented the looter-shooter genre when the first entry in the now ubiquitous franchise launched all the way back in 2009. Two console generations and over 15 years later, Borderlands 4 is finally upon us, bringing with it more freedom, replayability – and of course – loot than ever before. That said, in amongst all of the sequel’s many changes and improvements, by far the most impactful is its overhaul to movement.

Borderlands 4 Movement

I’m a bit of a movement fiend, with many of my favourite titles gameplay-wise offering fast-paced moment-to-moment action on all fronts – from gunplay, to enemies and, perhaps most importantly, movement.

While the Borderlands series has over its numerous entries tweaked and improved the formula to make for a more satisfying overall experience, Borderlands 4 is finally addressing by far the franchise’s biggest downside: its movement tech. Thanks to this, Borderlands 4 now feels like a complete experience; once again sitting at the top of the looter-shooter podium.

Prior to discussing the innovations of Borderlands 4 specifically, I would be remiss to not mention the MANY performance issues which PC players in particular are suffering from currently. With the likes of frame rate drops, stutters and what appears to be a memory leak issue (among other performance woes), the Unreal Engine 5-developed title has quite the journey to go on before being deemed acceptable on PC.

Even on console, the experience is far from perfect, with noticeable framerate issues on PS5 across both graphics modes; the lack of a motion blur toggle and no Field-of-View slider – all of which can and do have an impact on the game's sense of movement and momentum. Hopefully these issues and more are all resolved in due course.

With that said, lets take a trip back to 2009 where everything started. The big claim to fame with the original Borderlands was the fact that the game featured a near infinite number of different weapons to pick up, collect and use.

Of course, a majority of these were simply alterations of a smaller subsect of guns comprised of random stats, but the incentive to collect and find your favourite gun aided in the sense of replayability – and ultimately satisfaction upon obtaining your desired ‘god roll’ weapon.

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