MechWarrior Online is a vehicular combat game where players pilot bipedal machines to destroy enemy players. Customize your robot with weapons and gear, and engage in 12v12 battles for experience and cash towards new equipment.

MechWarrior Online puts you in the pilot’s seat of mechanized warriors designed for a future besieged by war. Customize your bipedal machine with a huge array of weapons and equipment, mixing and matching until you find the combination that suits your playstyle. Engage in 12v12 matches across various environments, from frigid wastelands to abandoned metropolis's. Three game modes exist for you to test your skills as a pilot: Conquest, Skirmish, and Assault. But combat must be approached tactically, monitoring your systems, enemy movements, and the environment to successfully win the battle for your team. Earn in-game currency from participating in battles and purchase new mechs and equipment to dominate the future of war.

Full Review

MechWarrior Online Review

By, Sean Sullivan

Ever since I watched Gundams thrash each other in the depths of space I’ve been enthralled by hulking machines. Few games capture the imaginative awe of strapping yourself into the cockpit of a bipedal robot. Luckily, the MechWarrior series is a testament to a future throttled by robotic warfare. After binging on Hawken for over a month I was looking forward to an in-depth approach to combat. Launching MechWarrior Online for the first time I realized piloting a BattleMech is more complicated than anime makes it seem.

Movement

A rather weak tutorial introduces you to Mechwarrior Online’s core mechanics. Navigating your bipedal steel legs is akin to walking with crutches—not easy at first. Mechs are divided into two halves, top and bottom, that can rotate independently from one another. Your mouse controls the rotation of the top half, while WASD control the steel beams from the hips down. Pressing “F” will realign your legs with your torso, while “C” realigns your torso with your legs. It feels clunky, like a toddler learning to walk on a waxed floor. But the complex maneuvers promote calculated steps, and a tactful approach to combat.

You can set your movement speed by adjusting the throttle. Lumber forward at top speed or approach cautiously, wary of enemy fire at every turn. While the tutorial lacks a clear introduction to weapons, firing a few bursts of laser-fire shows that you must monitor heat output. Even in the far future, weapons can cease functioning due to overheating. Effectively playing MechWarrior Online entails juggling all systems simultaneously. At first you’ll struggle to walk up a highway entrance ramp, but eventually running around hulking behemoths while firing will become second-nature.

Aesthetics

You can either play in third person mode, with a camera drone showing you your robot, or from the cockpit of the machine. While a third person camera angle has the advantage of peeking around corners like DayZ, the game is designed to place you in the pilot's chair. Every match starts with you booting up your machine’s systems in an excellently designed cockpit, with a HUD to intimidate an airline pilot. It evokes an awesome sense of immersion, and small details, like a hanging ornament in some machines, adds intimacy that cements a person being in the chair. You’re not the crafted steel and bolts holding the mech together, but the pilot strapped inside the beast.

Game Modes

With no single player mode to hold your hand, MechWarrior Online is devoted to multiplayer combat. Three game modes exist, but I was thrust into the midst of Conquest nearly every time I joined the que. Resource nodes are scattered across the map and the first team to collect 750 wins. Otherwise, if there are still robots thumping around the field when the timer hits 0, the team with the most resources wins. It’s simple, and even though resource collection is the primary goal, most games are a battle royale, resembling the other game mode Skirmish. And then there’s Assault which I never randomly joined, but tasks players with destroying or defending a single base.

Matchmaking is a melange of players of all skill ranks. There aren’t enough pilots to create an effective system based on skill. So you end up drowning in the deep end, while the adults swim freely around you. All I could think was, “where are my swimmies?” I didn’t mind so much, as I could follow more skilled players in an attempt to become their doppelganger and learn the game. And you will play with people from all over the world. I bounced between North America and European servers, and player latency parallels the wide range of available mechs.

Mechs

As a beginner you’re given access to a selection of Trial Mechs, 2 for each category: Light, Medium, Heavy, and Assault. While Assault mechs are bulky behemoths designed to engage on the front lines, Light mechs swiftly scout the battlefield and can dance around heavier mechs with ease. The game wants you to earn the in-game currency as quickly as possible to purchase your own mechanized warriors. And the only way to rack up money, is to slam your trial mech against the wall of brutal combat.

Combat

With only trial mechs to start off you’re equipped with two basic weapons: lasers and rockets. They’re underwhelming compared to the raucous cacophony of fusillades launched by your more experienced comrades. The basic equipment will not be enough to topple enemy mechs; it will barely tickle them. I learned how disadvantaged I was quickly. Charging into the battlefield, playing the game like Hawken, I fired my arsenal into enemy machines, only to explode after my enemy’s rockets erupted on my hull.

Combat became guerrilla warfare. Hiding behind structures I would peek out to fire my weapons before returning to the safety of cover. There was no other way to effectively approach veteran players. And with an aging player base there were few other beginners to test my strength against. My oily innards were instantly exsanguinated by enemy machine locked onto my position. And death spells the end of your participation in battle. Mistakes mean you're sent back to the menu or forced to spectate other players until the match is finished. Realism aside, at least one game mode ought to exist where players respawn. Waiting for the match to finish before you can test your skills again feels like an artificial cap on how much currency can be earned. I have the same issue with World of Warships. As a beginner you spend more time waiting for matches than you do participating in battle.

Not The Chosen One

Perched on a snowy hilltop I spotted a lonesome opponent slowly moving across the field. Locking on, I beamed him with lightsaber green laser and unleashed every rocket in my arsenal. Alone, I circumnavigated the machine, firing away whenever my weapons cooldown was up. Assaulting the machine for five minutes seemed to do nothing as my enemy brushed off the attack. And he missed nearly every shot he took against my agile frame. But with only a few well-placed rounds, my mech gave up—shutting down before erupting in a fiery explosion. Defeat never felt so final. MechWarrior Online is not approachable or accessible to beginners. Perseverance in the face of utter defeat is the only way to gain a foothold on the battlefield. Something nearly impossible to do until you can afford a new mech.

Mech Friday

After about six games, where my ability to pilot was brought into question, I accumulated enough currency to purchase a mech. The selection is enormous, and the technical interface lead my eyes to struggle to adjust. With slightly over 2 million in the bank I was able to purchase a small selection of mechs. And once purchase you can customize its loadout.

Far from the typical loadout in other games, consisting of a primary and secondary weapon, MechWarrior Online allows full control over your machine's configuration. But with no guidance, you're left mixing and matching weapons like an alchemist searching for the Philosopher’s Stone, hoping to discover the right combination. And your tests will be met with constant failure. Do I use siege weapons or gauss rifles? Or should I focus on lasers to puncture through steel? Mixing and matching becomes a matter of personal taste with no immediately apparent right or wrong way.

The game does include Hero Mechs, only purchasable with MechWarrior Online’s cash currency. And they are quite powerful comparatively, but not necessarily sufficient for victory. Purchasing a Hero Mech bypasses the hours of grind needed to purchase other mechs. But ultimately the person who will secure victory is the one who researches loadouts, and studies the game’s mechanics like a first-generation child of Tiger parents.

Final Verdict - Good

To immerse yourself in MechWarrior Online you’ll spend hours scavenging YouTube videos for tips. And that’s mainly due to the game’s lackluster introduction to its mechanics. But players who endure will find an advanced combat simulator that rewards patience and tactics over brute force. You can easily spend the majority of playtime crafting combinations of weapons and equipment to create the perfect warrior. It caters to a specific audience; the one that shuns arcade stylized combat. As it stands MechWarrior Online is the pinnacle of robotic warfare simulators.