The creative director of Far Cry 4 has just confirmed that the game will be having missions that would somehow take the players off the main game world of Kyrat. The single-player campaign of the upcoming first-person shooter will have players assume the role of a Nepali native, named Ajay Ghale, returning to his homeland of Kyrat to scatter his mother's ashes in her birthplace, but is then caught up in the civil war that been happening in the region by storm.
During a recent interview with Red Bull, game creative director Alex Hutchinson has mentioned that players will also get to visit some new locations.
"The core of the game is developed in Montreal as well as the main missions and most of the open-world. We try to leverage our co-development studios' talents on self-contained elements of the game, so they can have a certain degree of independence in production while sticking closely to the core creative vision of the game," Hutchinson explains.
Ubisoft Montreal is behind Far Cry 4's main story missions, but the company's Toronto and Shanghai studios are also working on sections that don't take place in Kyrat, lending a helping hand in for the sake of the great vision of the upcoming open-world first-person shooter.
The game's Creative Director has also confirmed that Red Storm Entertainment, a team presently with the development of the upcoming massively multiplayer third-person shooter Tom Clancy's The Division, is also in charge of handling Far Cry 4's competitive multiplayer mode.
Far Cry 4's E3 reveal gameplay footage featuring how the cooperative mode allows two players to take on challenges of the campaign, as well as a lot of juicy mechanics, including riding elephants into battle. The game also promises cutting-edge graphics, and the mountainous setting makes for some breathtaking vistas and adrenaline-packed action sequences, where players can jump off cliffs, soar through the skies, and glide over the ridges of the Himalayas.
Far Cry 4 is scheduled to be released on November 18 release in North America, and a Nove