Your data. Your choice.

If you select «Essential cookies only», we’ll use cookies and similar technologies to collect information about your device and how you use our website. We need this information to allow you to log in securely and use basic functions such as the shopping cart.

By accepting all cookies, you’re allowing us to use this data to show you personalised offers, improve our website, and display targeted adverts on our website and on other websites or apps. Some data may also be shared with third parties and advertising partners as part of this process.

Florian Bodoky
Review

Sniper Elite: Resistance – somewhere between frustration and fascination

Florian Bodoky
30.1.2025
Translation: Patrik Stainbrook

It’s more of the same. This sums up the latest iteration in the British sniping series pretty well. Shooting Nazis is still a hell of a lot of fun. But would I pay full price for it? Absolutely not.

That threatening detection meter popping up, the adrenaline kick when it turns orange. You’ve taken too long again. You aim, look through the scope, exhale and pull the trigger. The shot whips around and another «Sturmbannführer» dies. As if that wasn’t enough, the killcam shows how the bullet starts its bloody journey and where it hits in slow motion. The skull bursts, bones splinter, organs explode. Yeee-haw!

Sniper Elite: Resistance serves you the usual fare – but is it still fun? Not so easy to answer. Because while there are those ultra-satisfying times when you tear the gonads off a Wehrmacht soldier from 300 metres, there are moments that just seem outdated.

Operation Déjà vu: a story you already know

The missions take you through seven large levels, all open and versatile to play, but they lack any life beyond German soldiers. Whether it’s a small French town or a large Nazi castle, everything feels very familiar. And then there’s a dam too. Yep, I know it. The story’s also interchangeable, but you’re mainly here for the killcams, right?

Sniper Elite wellness: a bullet to combat stress

The game gives you the freedom to sneak, wreak havoc from a distance – or adopt the Rambo method. Good luck! At higher difficulty levels, Nazis are no longer just blind moles. At lower levels, however, you don’t get the feeling they’re particularly keen to maintain the Third Reich.

Harry Hawker: a blabbermouth from East London

You’ll have to get used to monologues. Harry Hawker yaps incessantly. Karl Fairburne was no poet either, but at least he mostly kept his mouth shut. Hawker, on the other hand, comments on almost everything. «Bloody hell, that was a good one!» after a fatal shot. «Oh look, I found a sneaky little tunnel, how convenient!» after every secret find. Not very charismatic.

Welcome to the map recycling factory

The mission design is also rather repetitive. Get documents, kill off higher-ranking Nazis, save someone. Documents are in a safe which needs a key. You’ll find them on an officer sneaking around somewhere. Or you can always use an explosive charge – another option in the constant interplay between action and stealth gameplay. Occasionally there are still a few switch puzzles here and there – but nothing too surprising.

Small innovations, big impact?

Of course, there are some things I don’t get. Why can’t Hawker climb walls? Why did the developers swap the button for a lethal melee attack and stun? Since I played part five not so long ago, I often accidentally send brownshirts to nap time instead of finishing them off for good. As a result, they often wake up and try to get at me from behind just when I’m having a gunfight with their comrades.

Multiplayer: the Axis invasion is back

One mode has real opponents playing Nazi hunters on the lookout for you. A thrill to some, only more of an invitation to spontaneously rage-quit for me. The AI already slaps me around well enough. I’ll spare myself pimply teenagers blasting me away and adding vulgar comments about members of my immediate family via the headset. Unfortunately, I had some technical problems with the pre-release version, so I wasn’t able to form a detailed opinion here.

Sniper Elite: Resistance is available for PC, PS5, Xbox Series X/S and is in the Game Pass. I tested the PS5 version that publisher Rebellion gave us free of charge.

In a nutshell

The war’s over – for now

In the end, one question remains: is the game fun? Yes. Is it new? Not really. If you love the series and just want to keep blasting Nazis to kingdom come, you’ll definitely have fun here. I did, precisely because the game is no Baldur’s Gate. You can finish it in a weekend – I had about ten hours of gameplay when the credits rolled.

But if you’re looking for real innovation, you’ll be disappointed. Unlike the series as a whole, I probably won’t remember much about the game. All in all, the war in Sniper Elite is over. Unless, of course, they choose a different conflict (there’s plenty to pick), rework the maps and fill them with life.

Pro

  • Cool sniping mechanics
  • Killcam
  • Nice to look at

Contra

  • Repetitive
  • Very little innovation
  • Annoying protagonist
Header image: Florian Bodoky

14 people like this article


User Avatar
User Avatar

I've been tinkering with digital networks ever since I found out how to activate both telephone channels on the ISDN card for greater bandwidth. As for the analogue variety, I've been doing that since I learned to talk. Though Winterthur is my adoptive home city, my heart still bleeds red and blue. 


Review

Which films, shows, books, games or board games are genuinely great? Recommendations from our personal experience.

Show all

These articles might also interest you

  • Review

    Hell is Us review: searching for a family in a civil war

    by Simon Balissat

  • Review

    "Cronos: The New Dawn" tested: a terrifying, almost perfect horror masterpiece

    by Domagoj Belancic

  • Review

    Ghost of Yōtei review: is this still open world?

    by Simon Balissat