Wanna

Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare arrives in a very crowded marketplace surrounded by competition. Never has the FPS genre had so many quality games launching in such a short space of time. Usually, CoD arrives like any cool kid to a party; fashionably late and steals the show. Unfortunately, despite a stellar campaign and outstanding visuals, Infinite Warfare not only fails to go toe-to-toe with 2016’s best bangers, but can’t even compete with its own stablemates, most notably the one that comes bundled in the £70 box.
While the Call of Duty series has become synonymous with intense and addictive multiplayer, it’s a pleasant surprise that the quality of the single player campaigns has steadily improved in recent years, which continues in Infinite Warfare.
The general plot is simple: the human race simply couldn’t stop pillaging Earth, so branched out to the solar system to mine for resources in the galaxy (rather than learning to recycle). As the world united it formed the UNSA, but an evil splinter faction also formed: the Settlement Defence Front, led by Kit Harrington’s