Metal Gear Solid V- The Phantom Pain -v1.15 A... -

That is Metal Gear Solid V . A game of stunning, silent dread mixed with explosive, sandbox chaos.

The Opening Hour You wake up in a hospital. Bandaged, broken, and confused. Flames roar. A floating boy in a gas mask stares at you. A man made of fire walks through bullets. Within 20 minutes, you’ve crawled past dying patients, witnessed supernatural horror, and ridden a horse while a burning whale leaps over a helicopter.

More importantly, this patch fixes the glaring early issues: The online resource drain has been rebalanced, the FOB (Forward Operating Base) infiltration lag is reduced, and you can finally skip the helicopter ride cutscenes.

Here is where the game hurts—intentionally or not. Metal Gear Solid V- The Phantom Pain -v1.15 A...

The competitive base invasions are still active but niche. High-level players have laser-guided rocket hands and sleeping gas mines. If you ignore FOBs, you'll miss some high-tier gear but can finish the whole single-player just fine. The resource grind is much kinder in v1.15 than at launch.

Every base in Afghanistan or Africa is a playground. Need to extract a prisoner? You can snipe guards from 300m, call in a sleeping gas airstrike, fulton a supply container with yourself hanging off it, or simply drive a tank through the front gate.

Hitman (World of Assassination), Far Cry 2 , Breath of the Wild 's "emergent chaos" approach. That is Metal Gear Solid V

PC / PS4 / Xbox One (Tested on current hardware with all patches)

Kiefer Sutherland replaces David Hayter as Snake (Venom Snake). He delivers maybe 10 minutes of dialogue in a 50-hour game. Most of the narrative comes from cassette tapes. The central villain, Skull Face, is menacing but underused.

This is the best playing stealth-action game ever made. Full stop. Bandaged, broken, and confused

With all patches, the infamous "Mission 51" (the true finale, set on a snowy island with Eli/Liquid Snake) is still missing . You can watch it as unfinished storyboard footage on the collector's Blu-ray. In-game, the narrative just... stops. That emptiness? That’s the phantom pain Kojima was talking about. Whether that's genius or a cynical mess depends on your tolerance for artistic frustration.

Here’s a review for Metal Gear Solid V: The Phantom Pain (v1.15, the final definitive version including all updates and DLC). Version played: v1.15 (Includes Ground Zeroes data integration, all DLC, and the final gameplay/QoL tweaks).