Hello, it’s me, your resident PlayStation FPS freak. At the outset of the PS3 era, Sony had two major franchises fostering entirely unique shooter experiences. One of them was viscerally realistic and grim Killzone, and the other was my beloved off-kilter Resistance. I didn’t play the original, but one of my older cousins had picked up the second title on PS3. If you ask most folks my age, the formative FPS title of their youth is probably a Call of Duty title, specifically Modern Warfare 2. While I’ve certainly got room in my heart for that legendary game, my love for the genre is entirely predicated on Resistance 2 and the sleepless nights me and my cousin spent duking it out in its massive 60-player Skirmish matches with one of the greatest armories of any FPS title.
Resistance was simply everything to me. It was massive and it was weird as hell. In the brief time that we had with the series, it ran the gamut of tones. The bookends of the trilogy were bleak post-apocalyptic shooters (Resistance 3 is particularly great), but the middle installment was cartoonish and all over the place. Nathan Hale and Joseph Capelli, the trilogy’s protagonists, could not be a greater representation of the series’ unique schisms across entries. Resistance was, above all else, fun as hell though, and it’s where I got my sea legs. Resistance’s weaponry, which took inspiration from Insomniac’s main series, Ratchet & Clank, also remains burned into my brain. The Augur remains one of my favorite weapons in any game and I learned trigger discipline while carefully placing tags on enemies and shooting them from around corners with the Bullseye.
Letting the series go has been one of the hardest pills to swallow over the last decade, especially because Resistance 3 really felt like it finally settled on a tone and formula that worked. Sure, it also brought the story to a pretty natural close, but there were enough interesting threads, especially as far as the origins of the invading alien species known as the Chimera, to expand upon the series and turn it into a pulpy sci-fi saga. I miss you all the time, Resistance. — Moises Taveras