![]() ![]() Wolfenstein's bloody brutality, especially when it comes to those Blazcowicz loves, only makes it easier to be sympathetic. Virtually everyone around him - from the fiendish General Deathshead to the brave Caroline Becker - also command attention. You get to see an interesting side to him that makes it easy to become invested in his journey, and he's not the only character who's worth noting, either. ![]() But when you fast-forward to 1960, Blazcowicz is older and smarter, hardened by his experiences in the post-war, Nazi-controlled world. You catch a glimpse of him 14 years before the events of the main campaign in a shockingly weak intro sequence that takes forever to put an actual gun in your hand, and at that point, he's more unrelenting meathead than poet laureate. The Wolfenstein series' longtime hero - BJ Blazcowicz - returns, though he's deeper, better written, and more fleshed-out than he's ever been.
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