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    Major spoilers ahead for those who are yet to finish the game.It's been a long time since James Bond had a video game worth playing. GoldenEye set the bar in 1997 and nothing has come close since. Bond is one of the most layered archetypes in popular culture, a man defined as much by his contradictions as his competence, and getting him right in an interactive format is genuinely hard. Any developer can replicate the suits, the cars, and the one-liners. What's harder to capture is the moral complexity underneath it, the sense that 007 is always operating somewhere between duty and conscience. IO Interactive's 007 First Light finally gets it right.First Light is an origin story, set entirely before James Bond earns his double-O designation. He's 26, a trainee Navy aircrewman, and convincingly arrogant in the way only someone who hasn't been humbled yet can be. Patrick Gibson plays him with just enough roughness around the edges — cocky, quick, and genuinely empathetic in a way that feels like it explains the man he becomes rather than just decorating him. The arc is less about Bond learning to kill and more about learning when not to.The plot earns its place in the franchise. MI6 has been running a quantum supercomputer that predicts national security threats, and when that system starts making mistakes, the people responsible for it start making worse ones to cover their tracks. It's the kind of story that only works if you trust your cast, and First Light does. Priyanga Burford's M is newly minted herself, and the writers made her out to be less a boss figure than a politician trying to hold something together. Alastair Mackenzie gives Q a warmth that Daniel Craig-era Bond never allowed him. Kiera Lester's Moneypenny actually has stakes in the story, not just the subplot. Lennie James, playing an original character named John Greenway, is quietly the best thing in the game; his slow pivot from antagonist to mentor is the kind of character work you don't usually get in this genre. The role of Isola Vale, another new character played by Noémie Nakai, in Bond's development is understated but deliberate. As a thief operating outside the system, she holds up a mirror to everything MI6 asks Bond to be, and watching him reckon with that tension is one of the quieter pleasures of the campaign.When the trailer dropped, the Hitman comparisons were immediate and inevitable. They're not entirely wrong — stealth matters, environments reward careful reading, and IO's fingerprints are everywhere — but First Light is clearly its own thing. The "Bluff" mechanic alone separates it: you can navigate missions through social manipulation and misdirection rather than neutralising everything in your path, which is probably the most Bond thing this game does. The Q Watch, a modified Omega Seamaster Diver that Omega actually made IRL, serves as your main gadget alongside other items like laser strap and missile pen, and the resource management around them keeps the pace honest.The "Licence to Kill" system is where the game shows its real understanding of the character. Bond can't just open fire whenever he wants; his gun is only legal when his life is directly at risk. He's still bound by his own morals and values, and the ethics of being a part of MI6. Ammo is scarce because a weapon isn't supposed to be his first instinct, and that single design decision changes how you think about every encounter. Hand-to-hand combat picks up the slack and has enough variation to be both experimental and fun. It's a mechanic that could have felt like a gimmick, but instead it feels like a thesis.The one thing that breaks the spell is technical rather than creative. Server disconnection pop-ups have a habit of appearing mid-mission, and when a game works this hard to pull you into Bond's headspace, being yanked back to a system notification kills the momentum in a way that's hard to shake off. It's a small thing, but immersion is fragile, and First Light earns enough of it to make the interruption feel worse than it probably should.Now, a James Bond game wouldn't be complete without the cars. Three Aston Martins are present across the campaign, the last of them a Q-modified Valhalla. IO tries to make the most of the locations by folding car sequences into the mission structure rather than just dropping them in as action set piece. What's disappointing, however, was how clunky the driving mechanics were. I also have a personal complaint that you only get to drive the Valhalla in what feels like a shoebox of an indoor parking space. That part stings.007 First Light lands where it matters. It understands that Bond isn't interesting because he's invincible, he's interesting because he has a code, and watching him build it is a better story than watching him execute it. 007 has always been about more than orders — James Bond always has something, or someone, to fight for.

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