


Set a few years after the defeat of Megatron in the first game, the game puts players in control of their chosen characters from the film, shifting between both A. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is, at heart, the worst of everything that modern big-money moviemaking has to offer - spectacle, sex, special effects, and sanitized violence - without a single redeeming feature. Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen is an intense, action, third-person shooter video game that is based on 2009's Transformers: Revenge of the Fallen movie. The relationship between Sam and girlfriend Mikaela ( Megan Fox) is laughably thin, and the film's need to overdo everything results in either misshapen comic relief scenes or action scenes so loud and large and quickly cut that they're simply empty blurs. The human characters aren't much better - the film bogs down in scenes where Sam's parents are concerned about him heading off to school, only to jettison all that in the name of globe-trotting action. It was not, however, necessarily inevitable that said sequel would be good. Whether you loved or hated the original Transformers, it made so much money that a sequel was inevitable. Director Michael Bay brings in robot after robot after robot, making it impossible to tell the metal mega-warriors apart and resulting in action scenes where who's doing what to who is conveyed more by screaming bystanders than clear, comprehensible filmmaking. The players can choose their protagonist from a large selection of available Transformers. The faults of the first Transformers movie are even worse here. The plot is loosely based on the Michael Bay's movie and once again features the conflict between the Autobots, led by Optimus Prime, and Megatron’s Decepticons that threaten the mankind.
