Borderlands 3 - It's bigger, better And Now In Space
PC Gamer US Edition|August 2019

Borderlands 3 takes to the stars. Is this a bold new direction for the series?

Phil Savage
Borderlands 3 - It's bigger, better And Now In Space

I’m in LA, in a ‘secret location’—it’s a warehouse—to experience the grand unveiling of Borderlands 3. It’s early in the day, and I’m still slightly jetlagged. On stage, projected onto a giant screen, Claptrap is doing a dance. His shrieks echo throughout the building. Having established that the series’ mascot is back, and— depending on your perspective—as funny or as too-irritating-for-this time-of-the-morning as usual, the memo continues. There’s banter, there’s wasteland combat, and there’s a miniboss. “Shiv,” introduces the title card. “Brought a knife to a gun fight.” Borderlands is back.

I’m initially underwhelmed. The early demo introduces some new movement options—sliding and mantling—but nothing that feels like a bold new direction for the series. An iterative sequel is all fine and well, but I’ve been fighting through Borderlands’ wastelands for tens— maybe hundreds—of hours. Is more of the same really enough?

Then, about 40 minutes into the demo, it happens. The demo skips ahead, and we’re introduced to Sanctuary III. It’s Borderlands 3’s new hub—a safe zone where players can chat with NPCs, shop, pick up quests, and test weapons. It’s also a spaceship. From the bridge, we can see the place that has defined the series up to this point: The planet of Pandora and its moon, Elpis. And then we leave, warping out of the system and arriving somewhere new.

This story is from the August 2019 edition of PC Gamer US Edition.

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This story is from the August 2019 edition of PC Gamer US Edition.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.