This was actually one of my favourite parts of the game because I had to learn which part of my swing was going to give me the most momentum and speed in order to maintain a good amount of fuel while covering vast distances quickly. The game feels very similar to the old Spider-Man games in which you use omni-directional gear to navigate through various buildings.
Following the cutscenes your adventure begins. After completing a mission in which you have to kill a bunch of dummy targets with the same vulnerable spot as a titan, the back of their neck, you then proceed to a variety of cutscenes. The game starts out with a bunch of cutscenes showing how the colossal titan broke through the wall and allowed other titans to breach the outer wall and then proceeds to show the main protagonist Eren Jaeger enrolling in the Titan Slaying Academy. Fair warning: the game and this review may contain spoilers if you haven’t read the manga or watched the anime. Wings of Freedom starts just like the anime does, explaining how the human race has been pushed to living inside massive walls. Attack on Titan has a few spots that make it a slightly dirty gem. Over the years I have played multitudes of movie/TV show to videogame ports and rare is it that I come across a gem in the massive pile that has accumulated. Reviews // 19th Nov 2016 - 5 years ago // By Matt Wilhelm Attack on Titan: Wings Of Freedom Review