'Mass Effect' Review: Trilogy Comes To An Incredible End

By LOU KESTEN   03/ 8/12 09:36 AM ET  AP

Mass Effect Video Game

-- Science fiction fans love their galactic empires. From the novels of Isaac Asimov and Frank Herbert to the multimedia epics created by George Lucas and Gene Roddenberry, the planet-hopping space opera has enthralled starry-eyed dreamers since well before the Apollo program.

With its Mass Effect series, BioWare has created the first video-game universe with the scope and ambition of Asimov's Empire or Roddenberry's Federation. But there's one problem: As "Mass Effect 3" (Electronic Arts, for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, PC, $59.99) begins, the whole thing is about to be obliterated.

See, while humanity has been busy expanding across the Milky Way – meeting a variety of intelligent species along the way – an ancient race of machines, the Reapers, has been lurking. And now that we've gotten smart enough for interstellar travel, we're ready to be harvested. As "Mass Effect 3" begins, the Reapers have invaded Earth, and the only way to stop them is by joining forces with all the other civilizations in the galaxy.

The task of uniting these diverse cultures falls to one Commander Shepard, the human who first stumbled across the Reapers in the original "Mass Effect." If you played the previous games, you can continue with the Shepard you've already created; if not, you can create a new one. Shepard can be male or female, strong and slow or delicate and agile, good with firearms or adept with psychic powers.

Those aren't the only decisions you have to make. The species of the Mass Effect galaxy get along about as well as the various cultures of 21st-century Earth. The belligerent, lizardlike Krogan hate the high-strung, amphibian Salarians. The weak but clever Quarians are on the run from the mechanical Geth they created.

And there's one more wild card: a shady organization called Cerberus whose leader, the enigmatic "Illusive Man," believes the Reapers can be controlled rather than destroyed. Shepard cannot make everyone happy, and the choices you make – some of which carry over from the two earlier "Mass Effect" games – will affect your final battle against the Reapers.

It's much more complex – and, ultimately, more rewarding – than the binary, man-vs.-monster conflicts of less ambitious space-combat games like "Halo" or "Gears of War." During the 40-plus hours of "Mass Effect 3," there's time for exploration, diplomacy and even romance, and many of its most memorable moments involve simple conversations between Shepard and the crew of the spaceship Normandy.

Make no mistake: Most of the action involves combat against the Reapers and Cerberus forces. There's more to the battles, though, than just picking the right assault rifle and firing away. You and your squadmates can also use "biotic" powers to sling fireballs, combat drones or miniature black holes at your enemies. And since this is a BioWare role-playing game, your powers become more intense as you accumulate experience. There's plenty of gunplay here, but it feels fresher than most of the increasingly generic shooters that have flooded the video-game market.

"Mass Effect 3" lives up to every promise BioWare made when it launched the series in 2007. It delivers a tightly focused, urgent adventure while still letting you pursue your own path through it. It wraps up the stories of all the memorable characters you met in the previous games. And it makes you pay the consequences of decisions you may have made five years ago.

Now that I've reached the end, I want to replay the entire trilogy and see what I missed the first time. I cannot think of a higher compliment. Four stars out of four.

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-- Science fiction fans love their galactic empires. From the novels of Isaac Asimov and Frank Herbert to the multimedia epics created by George Lucas and Gene Roddenberry, the planet-hopping space o...
-- Science fiction fans love their galactic empires. From the novels of Isaac Asimov and Frank Herbert to the multimedia epics created by George Lucas and Gene Roddenberry, the planet-hopping space o...
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12:11 AM on 12/26/2012
I got Mass Effect when it first came out because of Bioware. I loved knights of the old republic and thought they would produce a game at least as good. To my delight they produced the best video game series I have ever played. I've replayed the series more than any other game. Unlike any other game i've ever played, the've got me to care about the universe. To me Mass Effect is a masterpiece!
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04:40 PM on 03/10/2012
I just got Mass Effect 2 a couple weeks ago and had never heard of or played the series before I purchased it. I am really getting into the story and game now so I am looking forward to playing ME3 when I am done with it.
11:53 AM on 03/10/2012
The end wanted you to replay it?

I sincerely doubt that.

Worst ending ever; it has made me officially boycott the company.
12:24 AM on 12/26/2012
Unfortunately your right about the ending being so bad. If it wasn't so well done up until the end, than nobody would care. It was such a wonderfully done series that to mess up the ending just boggles the mind. Even the extended cut content doesn't sufficiently fix the ending. It just makes it more palatable.
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02:59 AM on 03/10/2012
Isaac Asimov and Frank Herbert had nothing to do with this garbage. Bad fantasy, maybe. Science fiction it is not. Pass!
12:42 AM on 12/26/2012
Actually there are ideas involved in the Mass Effect series similar to Frank Herbert and Isaac Asimov. Like for example; Is it right to sterilize a race of aliens to protect the galaxy? Can robots have a soul? These are some of the ideas explored in the Mass Effect universe, So then how is it not like what Asimov and Herbert write about?
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01:46 PM on 12/26/2012
So... because a piece of garbage rips-off ideas from two better writers that makes them the same? I'd have hoped you had a better argument than that. That's like comparing Bob Dylan to lady Gaga because they both sing about love.
07:36 PM on 03/09/2012
Worst. Endings. Ever. I played through all of it and I am so disappointed. It really made me dislike the first 2 and ME was my most favorite universe. I liked it more than Star Wars and about as much as Firefly. Now I just can't look at it without feeling depressed. I suggest everyone just turn it off at the ending. You will feel better.
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06:47 PM on 03/10/2012
I just finished it and I'm also disappointed. I have a friend who works there and I asked if there is an alternate ending but I doubt it.
11:58 AM on 03/08/2012
I'm about 10 hours in, and it's pretty awesome. I haven't touched the multiplayer aspect of it yet, which I will but unenthusiasticaly.

There is a ton more to do on the Citadel this time around. It's basically your retreat as you zoom throughout the galaxy. Just an amazing game all around so far.
11:52 AM on 03/08/2012
Here's a good explanation of the trilogy leading up to ME3: http://blip.tv/geekcrashcourse/mass-effect-geek-crash-course-6006888
11:52 AM on 03/08/2012
I love the Mass Effect series and am looking forward to playing this one.