
You don't miss a double jump until it's gone. Battlefield 4, by comparison, feels stilted and slow. Titanfall, Destiny and Advanced Warfare aren't the first FPS efforts to feature a more fluid and varied sense of movement, but they're the highest profile and most immediately influential. It may only be a year or so old, but the first person shooter has made serious strides in 2014, and blasting through Final Stand's four snow-covered expanses really demonstrate just how much has actually changed in the explosive world of shooters. Available for non-Premium members from December 2ndĭiving back into the fray, it's really hard to shake the feeling that Battlefield 4 really does belong in the past.Available now for Battlefield Premium members.After the 'big patch' finally shored up a game that has became the poster child for 'release now, fix later' (since replaced by Driveclub, Assassin's Creed Unity and Halo: The Master Chief Collection), it was all too easy to cast Battlefield 4 into the annals of history.

Given the time of year it perhaps shouldn't be a huge surprise, but I had completely forgotten that Battlefield 4 was due its fifth and final piece of DLC.
