In the year 2080, robots have taken over Tokyo, and in the game Binary Domain, players are in the middle of a fast-paced and intense battle to save humanity.
Players take control of an international peace-keeping team that is fighting its way through the broken-down lower levels of the city. The team soon starts to question its surroundings and the decisions it has made. Are robots getting more like people, or are people getting more like machines?
Who is the real enemy of people?
Binary Domain is an original squad-based shooter made by Toshihiro Nagoshi, who is known for making some of SEGA’s most popular video game series, like the Yakuza series, which has been praised by critics. In the year 2080, robots have taken over Tokyo, and in the game Binary Domain, players are in the middle of a fast-paced and intense battle for humanity. Players take control of a group of international peacekeepers who are fighting their way through the broken-down lower levels of the city. They soon start to question their surroundings and the decisions they make. Are robots getting more like people, or are people getting more like machines?
The main theme of life in Binary Domain is a key part of how the innovative AI system is being made. The highly advanced AI will make the battlefield more interesting than ever, and participants will have to plan their moves cautiously and methodically to get through the game’s dangerous environments.
In this intense 3rd person squad-based shooter from the brilliant mind of Toshihiro Nagoshi, you go to Japan in the year 2080 and have to take back control as a robot threat threatens to take over and make humans obsolete.
As Dan Marshall, you and your team must rise to the challenge and stop the mechanical threat before it’s too late. When is it too late?
You’ll face enemies who are very smart and will force you to think on your feet as they try to outsmart you and your team at every turn. You’ll have to think and shoot quickly as you help your team make moral decisions in real-time and earn their trust so you can lead them better.
Times in Tokyo: You’ll see two very different sides of the city: the dirty, falling-apart slums underneath and the clean, rich new city above.