Gears 5: Standard Edition – Xbox One

$14.11

(4503 customer reviews)
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  • From one of the most acclaimed game franchises in history, Gears 5 delivers an epic campaign and brutal action across five thrilling modes
  • Campaign: With all out war descending, Kait Diaz breaks away to uncover her connection to the enemy and discovers the true danger to Sera herself
  • Escape: A new, aggressive, high stakes co op mode featuring a three player suicide squad that must work together to take out enemy hives from within
  • Versus: May the best team win with 10+ other game types plus new and classic maps. Versus rewards every competitive style, from casual to pro
  • Horde: Endure 50 waves of ever tougher enemies using new hero abilities, building defenses, collecting power, leveling up your skills and working as a team
  • Map Builder: Create custom escape hive maps and experiences to share with and challenge your friends
  • Customize your gaming experience with updated accessibility features, including: Full controller remapping, single stick movement, Adaptive controller support, narrated UI and menus, improved subtitles and more

Specification: Gears 5: Standard Edition – Xbox One

Release date

September 10, 2019

Pricing

The strikethrough price is the List Price. Savings represents a discount off the List Price.

Product Dimensions

0.2 x 5.3 x 6.7 inches, 2.68 Ounces

Type of item

Video Game

Rated

Mature

Item model number

6ER-00001

Is Discontinued By Manufacturer

No

Item Weight

2.68 ounces

Manufacturer

Microsoft

Date First Available

June 10, 2018

4503 reviews for Gears 5: Standard Edition – Xbox One

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  1. Nataly

    Llego en perfectas condiciones, justo a tiempo y muy buen precio.

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  2. Ivett Villarreal

    Bueno

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  3. Mister Blue Sky

    As a long-time fan of the Gears of War franchise, I was eager to get my hands on Gears 5 for Xbox One. And let me tell you, it did not disappoint. From the stunning graphics to the pulse-pounding action, this game had me hooked from the start.

    One of the things I love about Gears 5 is the storyline. It picks up where the previous game left off, with JD Fenix and his squad battling the Swarm. But this time around, we get to see more of the backstory of Kait Diaz, who is struggling to uncover the truth about her family’s past. It’s a gripping tale of loyalty, betrayal, and redemption that kept me invested throughout.

    Of course, the gameplay is what really makes Gears 5 shine. The controls are tight and responsive, and the combat is intense and satisfying. Whether you’re using a chainsaw bayonet to slice through a Swarm drone or pulling off a perfectly timed active reload, there’s a real sense of weight and impact to every action.

    But what really sets Gears 5 apart is the variety. There’s a wide range of enemy types to fight, each with their own strengths and weaknesses. And the game constantly throws new challenges your way, from vehicular combat to puzzles that require you to think on your feet.

    Overall, I would highly recommend Gears 5 to anyone looking for an action-packed, immersive gaming experience. It’s a worthy addition to the Gears of War franchise, and one that will keep you engaged for hours on end.

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  4. PJ

    As much as I love Xbox, their exclusive library has been atrocious.

    I played the first gears a tiny bit back in 2006. But never played since. And I deeply regret not giving it a fair chance.

    So far I have just played multiplayer. But I like it so far. The mechanics feel very natural. The cover system works very well.

    The maps at launch are overall solid. Obviously there is always a few maps you dislike. But I like more than not.

    Graphically this pushes the Xbox One X to the limit. Frame rate consistently stays fluid. Even at 4K resolutions with HDR.

    Here’s is a couple of my complaints :

    Loading screens and match making are slower than preferable. I feel like it takes a bit of time to get into a game.

    Number of maps. They could of added more maps at launch. But they didn’t. Unfortunately this is a trend with Triple A games. And to be honest it’s disgusting.

    Although they are adding more content in the months to come. But there is definitely a trend with games coming out as incomplete. And I think.the Triple A gaming industry may collapse from it one day. Not for just this reason but many.

    However, don’t let those things take anything away. This is a very solid game. And it should provide many hours of enjoyment to people who buy it.

    Case in point, 4 out of 5 for me. The overall number of maps especially drops it down a star.

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  5. kriss karr

    This is one game that offers entertainment value from it’s story mode, as well as replay value from it’s multiplayer modes. Let’s start off with the story mode. If you have never played any gears before this one, there’s a previously on gears movie that brings u up to date. The story is like an interactive movie with very detailed characters and backgrounds that make you wanna start and never stop playing. The multiplayer has a few choices in including a mode where you and other online players play co-op to defeat monsters wave after wave while another option let’s you play co-op after you’ve entered the hive and fight your way to freedom. Every week new maps are released and the harder you put the difficulty, the more better the rewards are. You also level up each character individually which unlocks new perks to help with harder difficulty. Overall this game is highly recommended if you own an Xbox one. A must-have

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  6. ManiacalSpark

    This is a game that had some opportunities to do something really, really great but ultimately fails to follow through with them, leaving us instead with a grindy pseudo-open world that lacks content and interesting gameplay. It’s clear that they wanted to focus on multiplayer, which is a shame because Gears of Wars has ALWAYS been a franchise that was built around a campaign (with varying degrees of quality, but the series has always been built around story, not MP).

    For a TLDR, the game starts off strong, with two solid chapters that give you the classic Gears combat and push the story along, but the game rapidly falls apart after Act II. It is a very pretty game whose biggest draw for someone that has no interest in multiplayer, is the amount of detail and lore that exists within the game. The highly touted ‘open world’ is little more than two large, empty levels with sidequests that amount to collectible hunting and upgrade hunting for the biggest change to the gameplay; your robot.

    All in all, there’s not enough actual campaign content in Gears 5 to justify a full price. Wait until you can grab it for half price or less.

    For my longer thoughts…

    There’s only half a game’s worth of campaign here. The semi-open world levels are simply padding to make the game longer than it actually should be, and was a complete mistake. If you were to condense the game and remove those sections, along with ALL of the other empty sections within the actual mission areas themselves, then Gears 5 would be half the length.

    And as fun as piloting the Skiff may have been, it doesn’t make up for having huge empty levels.

    The gameplay is nothing new, played one Gears game you’ve played them all. There aren’t even any new memorable weapons to use in the campaign and the only major change is JACK, though he’s not entirely free of the padding curse this game has. While they did an excellent job at making all of JACK’s abilities useful in combat (I used every ability at least once beyond their scripted in-game tutorials), it’s still got the same cover shooter mechanics it had in 2006. Without JACK, the only other change is the inclusion of ‘Relic’ weapons, which pretty much ties in with the gameplay padding as they’re linked to the open world and you cannot take them with you across levels. These weapons don’t do much to alter base gameplay all that much and again, they’re in the game to pad it out, enticing you to spend time looking for these weapons instead of charging through the campaign. They feel pretty gimmicky, to be honest.

    The firefights themselves are not all that enjoyable. On top of the old gameplay, each fight feels way less intense than it did in the original trilogy. And on top of that, depending on what kinds of enemies you’re fighting, they feel very bullet spongey, as if again designed to pad the game by making fights take longer. There’s no real unique gameplay sections (not even with the Skiff) to make sections stand out, and the big boss fights are just more grinding-based padding. They’re not entertaining to fight and take a long time to complete, especially if you die at any point.

    The biggest strength of this game is the worldbuilding. This is the singular area in which Gears 5 shines. The Coalition has an excellent team of creatives, and while the actual plot of the game falls flat at the end of Act II, they have done a great job at filling in story holes that Epic chose not to reveal in the original games. It is very satisfying to know the answers to questions I’ve about the story since 2006. Adding on top of the characters being far more likable this time around, having lost the cringe, Whedonesque dialog of Gears 4. I wasn’t actively rooting for the new characters to die for dramatic effect this time around.

    Story-wise, again, good to have answers to very long standing questions, but there’s no true sense of urgency in what you’re doing, and in the end, amounts to nothing. The few new plot beats are clumsily done and make no sense, given the events of Gears 4 and don’t do much to push the narrative forward. It doesn’t take enough risks with the new stuff and the story pretty much falls apart by the end of Act II. There’s an arbitrary choice tossed in your face near the end of the game and has little impact for how poorly it is executed. If this had been entirely a cutscene with a pre-determined ending, then the imapct would have been higher.

    The levels that the art team has created are gorgeous. Easily one of the best looking games I’ve ever played and that was on a bog-standard Xbone. The details they put into crafting these areas and making them stand out is commendable, but I truly didn’t feel as though any of them stood out in my mind like the locations and play spaces of the original trilogy did. Again, gameplay wise they levels are letdowns, but lore-wise they do a pretty good job at showing the larger world.

    I’ve yet to be impressed by The Coalition’s music, and the same goes for here. There’s nothing new on display here, no new tracks that ear-wormed into my head. There’s not much to say about the gun sounds, given there’s nothing new on display. Voice acting is better than the last game, but the focus on Kait and her voice actress Laura Bailey is a little silly. Laura Bailey isn’t bringing anything truly new to the table that you haven’t heard her do better in other games (like the great job she did in Shadow of RAAM DLC years ago). If anyone deserves to get top billing for the game, it would be Del’s voice actor. Del is much more likable this time around and you can tell the VA is truly trying. All the other characters are fairly eh in delivery.

    All in all, Gears 5 is a severely underwhelming game for someone that only plays campaign. The Coalition has failed to find and create interesting combat experiences and needs to sit down and really study Epic’s level and encounter design. The story falls flat way too quickly and there’s just not much there.

    Two, three at the most, stars out of five for Gears 5. Wait until you can get it for half price or cheaper because that is about how much the game is truly worth in terms of good content.

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  7. JAIRO ANDRADE

    Totalmente nuevo, funciona perfecto

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  8. よーいドロン

    綺麗な状態で届きました

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  9. Bastante buenardo el producto

    Por un lado el juego se siente bien y se juega bien pero por otro es absurdo que me obliguen a comprar gold para jugar modos que antiguamente no lo requerían, haciendo que solo lo único disfrutable para un jugador la campaña

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  10. James Linville

    It was every bit a described on Amazon. I couldn’t be more satisfied and the price was great. Cheapest price I have ever paid for an Xbox One game.

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  11. Guillermo Arturo Díaz Gutiérrez

    Llegó rápido y en exelentes condiciones, me encanta la saga y esperaré el siguiente título

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    Gears 5: Standard Edition – Xbox One
    Gears 5: Standard Edition – Xbox One

    $14.11

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