![]() ![]() It was also a harbinger of the divided, demanding, and sometimes toxic decade of fandom that followed it. But the legacy of Mass Effect 3 is more than that of a really good game that couldn’t quite tie a bow on a mostly excellent saga. The game remains a largely lauded conclusion to an almost universally celebrated trilogy-one whose upgraded and repackaged Legendary Edition was one of the 20 bestselling games on three systems last year, and one whose disappointing 2017 sequel only slightly subdued anticipation for a forthcoming fifth game and TV adaptation. ![]() On Sunday, Mass Effect 3 will turn 10 years old. The ending, many Mass Effect fans felt, was a failure. By the middle of the month, though, that contentment had curdled, at least in some vocal quarters. A month earlier, BioWare producer Mike Gamble had promised players closure and expressed optimism about how the game’s audience would receive its revelations, saying, “I honestly think the player base is going to be really happy with the way we’ve done it.” At first, it appeared his prediction had proved correct: In early March 2012, happiness and prosperity prevailed. Shortly after its release, its Metacritic score sat at 94, falling between the similarly lofty aggregated grades of Mass Effect and Mass Effect 2. In its first month on the market, Mass Effect 3 doubled the U.S. But for BioWare, the storied RPG developer that launched the trilogy in 2007 and concluded it in 2012, the first impression produced by the franchise’s big finish wasn’t bad at all. ![]() Those opening lines set the desperate tone maintained for much of the final installment of the Mass Effect trilogy, in which an existential threat foretold in the first two games endangers all life in the universe. “How bad is it?” one military man asks another in the first few seconds of Mass Effect 3. ![]()
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