Speaking with Strategy Former, the Bulletstorm front man admitted that he played such games, but that he was getting a bit tired of the format:
”I love them, I play them, It’s just that there’s this trend lately that - it doesn’t matter whether it’s World War II or Sci-fi, it’s always military based, everything is about securing the LZ all the time.”
He outlined a vision similar to the current state of movies, whereby two films in the same genre, and even with similar themes, can be completely different - citing Die Hard and Independence Day as examples.
”They’re both over the top, action, both have jokes and humour, but this is like aliens invading earth and the other is a cop shooting up terrorists,” he said.
”This is what we wanted to do. We don’t want you to hate military shooters, we just want you to know that there can be something else as well.”
Bulletstorm will be releasing on all platforms on February 25th. You can read the rest of the interview here.