Earlier this week, Activation released Warzone for PlayStation 4, Xbox One, and PC. Warzone free play Call of Duty battlefield, similar in structure to popular genre games. It's a gimmick for Warzone that we're incredibly big – and that it's a weird game, apparently, with many players complaining that the game's steps are too quiet.
Each cycle of Warzone dropped to 150 players, divided into 50 teams of three, on a large map of Verdansk—A war-shaped city with a 20-story location, an international airport, and a sports stadium. In the first 24 hours, more than six million people started playing. Scroll social the media and you will get a lot of praise. But there is one clear issue: Footprints are established.
"The feet don't seem to register properly," wrote one fan on popular Reddit cord. “The feet are so bad,” replied one. "Can't you hear & # 39; m." Scroll through the entire thread and you'll read the same complaints.
What Call of Duty: Modern Wars came out late last year, one of the biggest complaints was about footstep volume – in particular, that it was too big. It sees to it Warzone an extension to 2019 & # 39; s Modern Warfare, there is a Goldilocks environment in all of this. It may seem trivial, but the odds apply: If you don't hear gunfire, then your rivals should not.
The good news is that there is a way to increase the footprint, at least on average. Under the audio settings, you will find seven different options. In Studio Reference (standard setting) and Dynamic Home Theater, the soundtrack for footsteps sounds like John Cage "4 & # 39; 33." The Home Theater is the best, but in reality you should be bothered to hear any footballs, especially under the heavy fire road.
The mode you want is encouraging. It features a fairly balanced range and a neutral fit, which means treble or bass are less powerful. The planetary engines still groan and the sounds around the firing gun still need to be fixed. (A long rifle still registers a similar one near you.) For the most part, though, Boost offers similar footprints on much-needed feet.
For reference, I do not have a nice surround sound setup (thank you very much, shoebox apartment) and I always play the sound right without my TV speakers. If you shake different setups, your audio experience may be completely different. You can check all these settings out of the game and switch them to planes from the menu. As you select the audio setting, you can click on the feed icon to see more details about each setting. From there, you can hit the square button (on the PS4) to hear the sample.
Developers haven't dealt with player complaints yet, so currently using Boost settings is as good as getting. Of course, a great way to increase foot volume is Call of Duty close the game and go up Warf– (ducks and running).
More Call of Duty: