


So, does it manage to respect the first two Deus Ex games or should it be erased from the franchise's history? Let's find out. Promising the same gameplay variety as its predecessors, with sharp graphics and deep role-playing mechanics, Human Revolution has a hard task ahead of it. Now, Eidos Montreal, together with Square Enix, are trying to honor its legacy with Deus Ex: Human Revolution, a prequel that charts the rise of human augmentations and the large part of society that doesn't want anything to do with it.

Few video game franchises command such a large cult appeal like Deus Ex, which managed to impress legions of role-playing fans back in 2000, with its great gameplay, variety of missions and, most of all, because you could play it in a variety of ways, from a stealthy, non-combatant, to a big, hulking killing machine.
