Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League

Suicide Squad:
Kill the Justice League
Developer(s)Rocksteady Studios
Publisher(s)Warner Bros. Games
Director(s)
  • Sefton Hill
  • Axel Rydby
  • Adam Doherty
  • Rasmus Hoejengaard
Designer(s)Ian Ball
Programmer(s)
  • Chip Bell
  • Ben Wyatt
Artist(s)David Hego
Writer(s)
  • Ben Schroder
  • Martin Lancaster
  • Grant Roberts
  • Sefton Hill
  • Ian Ball
Composer(s)
  • Nick Arundel
  • Rupert Cross
SeriesBatman: Arkham
EngineUnreal Engine 4[1]
Platform(s)
ReleaseFebruary 2, 2024
Genre(s)Action-adventure, third-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League is a 2024 action-adventure shooter game developed by Rocksteady Studios and published by Warner Bros. Games. Based on the DC Comics team Suicide Squad, it is a spin-off of the Batman: Arkham series, and a follow-up to Batman: Arkham Knight (2015). Set five years after the events of Arkham Knight, the game's storyline follows four supervillains—Captain Boomerang, Deadshot, Harley Quinn, and King Shark—who are assembled by Amanda Waller. They are sent to Metropolis to stop the alien invader Brainiac and kill the members of the Justice League who became homicidal after being brainwashed by him.

The game is presented from a third-person perspective and its open-world design allows players, either individually or cooperatively, to freely roam Metropolis. It was first announced in August 2020 and was scheduled to be released in 2022, but was delayed multiple times. It also had an early access period for owners of the a deluxe edition that began on January 29, 2024.

Kill the Justice League was released worldwide for PlayStation 5, Windows, and Xbox Series X/S on February 2, 2024, to mixed reviews.

Gameplay

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League is an action-adventure game[2] set in an open world based in Metropolis.[3] The game features four playable characters: Captain Boomerang, Deadshot, Harley Quinn, and King Shark.[4] While it can be played solo, the game also features a four-player cooperative multiplayer mode. When played solo, players can switch between characters at will, while the other characters are controlled by the AI.[5][6]

Each character has access to two weapon classes, some overlapping between multiple characters. Each of them also has a unique melee combat style and traversal method, such as Harley who uses a baseball bat and travels using Batman's grapple gun. A skill tree progression is included, allowing players to re-spec into different skills at any point throughout the game for different build experimentation.[7] Post-launch content is set to be released in the form of "seasons", with frequent free content updates featuring new locations and playable characters.[8]

Synopsis

Characters

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League is set in the universe previously established by the Batman: Arkham series,[9] five years after the events of Batman: Arkham Knight (2015). The game centers around Task Force X / The Suicide Squad, which is composed of Arkham Asylum inmates Harleen Quinzel / Harley Quinn (Tara Strong),[10] Digger Harkness / Captain Boomerang (Daniel Lapaine), Floyd Lawton / Deadshot[a] (Bumper Robinson), and Nanaue / King Shark (Samoa Joe),[11] created by A.R.G.U.S. director Amanda Waller (Debra Wilson).[12] The main antagonist takes the form of Brainiac (Jason Isaacs),[13] who has invaded Earth and begun brainwashing its inhabitants, including Justice League members Clark Kent / Superman (Nolan North),[14] Barry Allen / The Flash (Scott Porter), John Stewart / Green Lantern (Dan White),[15] and Bruce Wayne / Batman (Kevin Conroy).[16]

Other characters interacted with in the game include Diana Prince / Wonder Woman (Zehra Fazal), the only member of the Justice League not under Brainiac's control;[17] Colonel Rick Flag (Jim Pirri), an A.R.G.U.S. operative working for Waller; Lex Luthor (Corey Burton), a megalomaniacal billionaire and Superman's arch-nemesis;[18] Lois Lane (Seychelle Gabriel), a Metropolis news reporter working for the Daily Planet; Aaron Cash (Duane R. Shepard Sr.), an Arkham Asylum guard; and Edward Nigma / The Riddler (Wally Wingert), a supervillain who challenges the Squad with completing various puzzles across the city; Oswald Cobblepot / The Penguin (Nolan North), a Gotham City crime lord and weapons dealer who supplies the Squad with anti-metahuman weaponry; Mikron O'Jeneus / Gizmo (Rick Pasqualone), a vehicle expert who develops various means of transportation for the Squad; Zalika / Hack (Omono Okojie), a technomancer who monitors the Squad's neck bombs and provides them upgrades; Hiro Okamura / The Toyman (Christopher Sean), a mechanical genius who idolizes the Justice League;[18] and Ivy (Darcy Rose Byrnes), a reincarnated version of Pamela Isley / Poison Ivy who died during the events of Arkham Knight, with no memories of her past life.[19]

Plot

Arkham Asylum inmates Deadshot, Captain Boomerang, Harley Quinn, and King Shark are freed from captivity by A.R.G.U.S. director Amanda Waller and forced to join her Task Force X, the "Suicide Squad". After miniature bombs are injected into their heads, Waller sends the squad into Metropolis, which is currently under attack by Brainiac. When they raid the Hall of Justice, a brainwashed Green Lantern attacks the squad and explains that Brainiac's attack is the beginning of his plans to terraform Earth. The Flash intervenes to rescue the squad but is gravely wounded and captured by a brainwashed Batman when Boomerang pulls him out of hiding. The squad retreats to the Hall of Justice and encounters Wonder Woman, the only member of the Justice League who was not brainwashed. She refuses to work with them just as Waller orders the squad to kill the Justice League and end their threat.

Waller has the squad scour Metropolis for weapons and technology that can be used against the Justice League, as well as forcibly recruiting other villains into their ranks. They attempt to apprehend Lex Luthor to obtain his knowledge, but he is killed by a now-brainwashed Flash. The squad narrowly escape due to Wonder Woman's intervention. She uses her lasso on the Flash to find a way to stop Brainiac, with him replying that the only way is to kill her friends. The squad is supplied with anti-Speed Force tech, which they use to kill the Flash. Green Lantern arrives and forces the squad to flee through one of Brainiac's portals. The squad finds themselves transported to Earth-2, an alternate Earth that has already been destroyed by Brainiac. They also meet an alternate version of Luthor, who reveals that he had been collaborating with his Earth-1's version to prepare for Brainiac's invasion.

Luthor-2 transports the squad back to their dimension and warns that Waller will get them all killed as her Earth-2 version did to her own squad. The squad breaks into Wayne Enterprises' secret bank vault, where they find Wonder Woman crafting a Kryptonite-based shield. After she leaves, Luthor-2 secures Yellow Lantern batteries Batman was keeping as a contingency against Green Lantern and gives them to the squad. He also reveals that Waller has no intention of granting the squad their freedom, either letting them get killed or using Brainiac's mind-control technology on them otherwise. The squad then confront and kill Green Lantern, temporarily disabling a shield protecting Brainiac's ship. Waller attempts to call a nuclear strike on Brainiac, willing to sacrifice the squad, but a brainwashed Superman thwarts her plans.

Wonder Woman and Superman begin battling each other as the squad attempts to escort Waller to safety inside the Hall of Justice. Wonder Woman stabs Superman with a shard of Kryptonite, but he survives and kills her before retreating to Brainiac's ship. Luthor-2 theorizes that Brainiac changed Superman's DNA to be more resistant to Kryptonite, and suggests capturing Batman so he can devise a countermeasure. The squad captures Batman in his hideout and take him to Luthor-2, who develops Gold Kryptonite to combat Superman. With no further use for Batman, Harley shoots him dead. Superman is lured out and subsequently killed with the squad's Gold Kryptonite weapons. However, Brainiac captures them and intends to brainwash the squad into his minions. Luthor-2 rescues them and reveals that he has learned there are thirteen different Brainiacs spread across different dimensions working together to take over the entire multiverse.

Waller and Luthor-2 coordinate to teleport the squad to Brainiac's location to confront him directly. After a long battle, the squad subdue and capture Brainiac, allowing Luthor-2 to extract the information in his brain. The extraction ends up killing Brainiac and thwarts his invasion. The squad then prepares to hunt down the remaining twelve Brainiacs across the multiverse.

Development

Following his death on November 10, 2022, the game marks Kevin Conroy's final role as Batman.

A video game based on the Suicide Squad was first announced by then DC Comics chief creative officer Geoff Johns in July 2010.[20] In February 2012, he elaborated that the game was in development, adding that "Because of the concept, you have a game where any of the lead characters can conceivably die and it's not a stunt. Some really cool story could come out of that."[21] The formation of the Suicide Squad was teased at the end of Batman: Arkham Origins (2013)—developed by WB Games Montréal—which featured a post-credits scene in which Deathstroke is asked by Amanda Waller to join the team, and in Batman: Arkham Origins Blackgate (2013), in which Deadshot and Bronze Tiger join the team with Bane under consideration.[22][23] In the years since Batman: Arkham Knight (2015) was released, there had been rumors suggesting that WB Games Montréal was working on a Suicide Squad game, but no official announcement was made from the development team or publisher.[24] In December 2016, Jason Schreier from Kotaku revealed that the title was cancelled.[25]

Rocksteady, the creator of the Batman: Arkham franchise, was initially rumored to be working on a Superman-themed game, which they later debunked.[26] Rocksteady announced Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League in August 2020,[27] with the first trailer for the game premiering at DC FanDome on August 22, 2020. As the game is set in the "Arkhamverse", plot threads established in the Batman: Arkham series, including the Joker's death in Batman: Arkham City (2011) and the public revelation of Batman's identity as Bruce Wayne in Arkham Knight, would continue in Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League.[28] The Los Angeles–based company Unbroken Studios assisted Rocksteady in the development of the game.[29] In 2022, Rocksteady co-founders Jamie Walker and Sefton Hill left the company after eighteen years of service. In January 2024, it was announced they had formed a new company called Hundred Stars Studios, which would consist of "100 industry veterans and emerging talents."[30]

Release

On March 23, 2022, Rocksteady announced that Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League had been delayed from its initial 2022 launch window to early 2023.[31] At The Game Awards 2022, the release date was revealed to be May 26, along with the announcement that Batman would appear in the game, posthumously voiced by Kevin Conroy in what was marketed as his final performance as the character following his death on November 10, 2022.[32][33][34][35]

On February 23, 2023, during a PlayStation State of Play and a separate FAQ, Rocksteady confirmed the game would require an internet connection at all times (even when playing solo), have a battle pass (only including cosmetics) and is set to receive post-launch content (such as new playable characters, missions and weapons).[8][36] On 8 December 2023, Rocksteady announced that an offline mode will be added to the game after launch.[37]

On April 13, 2023, Rocksteady announced that the game had been delayed again to 2 February 2024.[38] The Epic Games Store version, however, was delayed to March 5, 2024 with no specified reason.[39]

On January 29, 2024, the game was released 72 hours as early access for owners of the deluxe edition on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S. Later that day, servers were taken down for several hours to fix a bug that caused players' story progress to be fully complete upon starting the game,[40] with developers later giving affected players in-game currency in the way of an apology.[41]

Four additional playable Squad members are set to be introduced during the game's post-launch seasons, including an alternate reality version of the Joker.[42]

Reception

Pre-release

Press previews were "overwhelmingly negative" in the run up to launch, according to Kotaku and VG247.[41][52] Publications also noted that many outlets were not sent review codes from Rocksteady during this time.[53][54] In an interview with BBC's Newsbeat, Eurogamer's Victoria Phillips Kennedy found the situation "slightly unusual" and speculated it was in response to the "lukewarm" previews.[53] Chris Carter of Destructoid wrote it was "not only worrying, but strange", attributing it to technical issues experienced during the previews and upon release.[55] While acknowledging they were one such outlet affected, Eurogamer's Chris Tapsell noted that no one was entitled to a review code, and that similar circumstances for other games had occurred before.[56]

Post-release

Suicide Squad: Kill the Justice League received "mixed or average" reviews, according to Metacritic.[43][44][45]

Writing for IGN, Simon Cardy called the plot a "genuinely good DC comics story", but criticised the repetitive gameplay and "tired and dull" mechanics.[46] Push Square's Aaron Bayne concluded that while he found the game fun and better than other live service games, it was still a lesser product than the Arkham games that had come before.[48] Tassi singled out the campaign as a point of criticism, stating that it's "not good. And gets increasingly worse as time goes on it", though praised the graphical fidelity on display in cutscenes as well as the combat mechanics.[57]

More positively, Video Games Chronicle's Jordan Middler concluded that the game was "much better than the marketing would have you believe", enjoying the writing and gameplay but believing it was let down by its live service elements.[49] Zack Zwiezen for Kotaku also concurred, expressing that the game was fun and well-written, though criticizing the repetitive mission design and live service endgame that he regarded as ending the game on a sour note.[58]

The portrayal of Batman drew mixed opinions from publications. Polygon's Michael McWhertor remarked that Batman's presence was not only felt throughout the game but that his depiction was in keeping with prior entries, particular praising Kevin Conroy's performance.[59] Conversely, writing in IGN, Jesse Schedeen opined that he considered Rocksteady's handling of Batman poor, describing it as a waste of potential compared to how he was last seen in Arkham Knight.[60] Batman's fate also drew backlash from many fans who claimed it was disrespectful, both as a sendoff and to Kevin Conroy's legacy.[61][62][63] In Forbes, Paul Tassi felt the response an overreaction given the comic book nature of the game and therefore ability to handwave decisions in this medium.[64] '

Prequel comic

A prequel comic titled Suicide Squad: Kill Arkham Asylum was originally scheduled to release on May 30, 2023, four days after the game was originally set to release, but was delayed to October 2023, and delayed again to February 6, 2024. Its story takes place between the events of Arkham Knight and Suicide Squad: Kill The Justice League, and is about how Amanda Waller took control of Arkham Asylum and recruited Task Force X for their mission to kill the Justice League.[65]

Notes

  1. ^ This version of Deadshot is African-American, who also claims that the Deadshot who appeared in previous Batman: Arkham games was an imposter. In-game dialogue suggests the previous Deadshot is a multiversal variant.

References

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