That said, High Moon's 2012 Fall For Cybertron, follow-up to the more forgettable War of Cybertron, was arguably made of sterner stuff overall.
For the past decade, the house of Kotick has been publishing Transformers games, most of which were associated with the beryllium baloney of the Michael Bay movies, but a handful of which did their own thing.īy far the most ambitious result of the arrangement was 2015's animation-styled combo-brawler Transformers: Devastation, developed by no less than Bayonetta and Nier: Automata studio Platinum (though handled by a different arm of the company). The issue is that robots in disguise toy-makers Hasbro and Activision couldn't deal with that right now.
Here's a hint: they've been removed from Steam, plus all other digital marketplaces - as have subsequent and worse sequels. If you felt you could have waited an eternity to get around to playing Fall of Cybertron, War For Cybertron or Devastation, that trypticon of broadly well-received, Activision-published Transformers third-person shooters, I've got bad news.