Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Gaming
  3. Features

XDefiant finds a perfect middle ground between Call of Duty and Overwatch

Add as a preferred source on Google
Key art for the GSK faction for XDefiant.
Ubisoft

When I first installed and started to play XDefiant, I didn’t think I’d like it. It looked like a random mishmash of Ubisoft IP. I didn’t think it would pull off the gameplay mix between hardcore military shooters like Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3 and hero shooters like Overwatch 2. Thankfully, XDefiant proved me very wrong, and I’ve had a hard time putting the game down since I started playing it ahead of Season 1.

The aspects of XDefiant that I thought would be weaknesses ended up being its strengths. It provides the power fantasy of a hero shooter while also delivering the engaging mission types and intricate gunplay of a military shooter. Gameplay customization doesn’t just happen on a hero or weapon level, but both at the same time. Although certain areas of XDefiant’s presentation could be much better, it’s a fun celebration of the Ubisoft franchises featured.

Recommended Videos

From a gameplay perspective, XDefiant truly finds the middle ground between Call of Duty and Overwatch. Before a game starts, players choose a faction to play as. Each of these factions is based on a Ubisoft game and has three agents that players can choose and customize with unique skins. While individual characters don’t have unique abilities, the factions do. I ended up being drawn most to the Echelon faction based on Splinter Cell because its abilities let me temporarily go invisible or see an enemy through walls. That’s something that would get me banned in Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 3, but feels perfectly balanced and accounted for in XDefiant.

XDefiant
Ubisoft

Other faction abilities feel equally powerful. Rainbow Six Siege’s GSK lets players place a trap over an objective, while Far Cry 6’s Libertad provides easier healing. By making every faction feel useful, with none feeling particularly weak, players are free to choose the one that fits their playstyle the best. That removes the pressures of role queue or always thinking about proper team compositions that typically permeate through hero shooters, although that is something probably worth considering when you’re playing Ranked mode competitively.

While those gameplay elements and modes like Escort feel pulled from Overwatch 2, the game feel is a lot closer to military shooters like Call of Duty or Battlefield. Call of Duty alumni helped create the project, and that can be felt with how fluid and intuitive XDefiant’s gunplay is, the attention to detail given to things like match voiceover being unique for each faction, and very rewarding per-weapon progression and loadout customization.

Typically, the weapon progression of Call of Duty is something I have a hard time getting into because those games have such a quick “time to kill.” I never feel like I get to spend enough time with a single weapon to make leveling it worthwhile because I always feel like I need to change my approach to fights. XDefiant has faction abilities and a longer time to kill than Call of Duty, though, so I had enough time to learn that I really like LMG weapons and have made a more active effort to upgrade and kit out my weapons.

XDefiant gameplay with UI.
Ubisoft

XDefiant perfectly mixes elements from shooters that I struggled to get into. Oftentimes, melting pot design like this can make a game feel creatively bankrupt; look at something like The First Descendant. Admittedly, XDefiant’s obtuse menus and user interface, poor battle pass full of relatively useless cosmetics, and lack of any coherent narrative premise do hurt it as well.

Still, its hybrid design makes for a multiplayer shooter that feels tailor-made for me. If this all sounds appealing to you, then I highly recommend checking out XDefiant if you’re looking for the next multiplayer shooter to add to your rotation, even if you initially thought it wouldn’t be for you like I did.

XDefiant is available for free across PC, PS5, and Xbox Series X/S.

Tomas Franzese
Former Digital Trends Contributor
A former Gaming Staff Writer at Digital Trends, Tomas Franzese now reports on and reviews the latest releases and exciting…
Topics
I played like a rat in Arc Raiders, and the loot was disgustingly good
Ratting my way downtown to the best gear
An ambush in Arc Raiders

I did not go into Arc Raiders planning to play like a rat. After a few bad runs, I had lost some of my good gear and just wanted to blow off some steam in the game's unofficial PvP arena "Stella Montis". In the best-case scenario, the goal was to go in guns blazing, borrowing some fine piece of equipment from fellow raiders, and booking it to the extract. The worst-case scenario, where I would lose everything, didn't bother me since I was running a free loadout.

Stella Montis has a reputation. It is built for tight and tense corridors that encourage player engagement. But another reason for its infamy is how it exposes one of the players' biggest frustrations with this game, which is the free leadout problem. Free loadout players arrive with a basic gun, ammo, shield, and health, which is not much on paper, but enough to become dangerous when they have nothing meaningful to lose.

Read more
Assassin’s Creed Hexe leak predicts the return of a legendary hero and I can’t wait for it
The legendary Assassin may finally return in Ubisoft’s darkest AC game yet.
Assassin's Creed Codename Hexe Featured Teaser

Ezio Auditore might finally be returning to Assassin’s Creed. And honestly, Ubisoft knows exactly what it’s doing by pulling that nostalgia trigger.

Assassin’s Creed Hexe leaks hint at Ezio’s return

Read more
I’m still not sold on a disc-less Xbox, but Project Helix feels inevitable now
Game Pass, cloud gaming, and digital libraries are winning, whether you and I like it or not.
Xbox Project Helix

Xbox’s next-gen console might be going fully digital. And if the latest leaks are accurate, Microsoft could finally be preparing the move it almost made more than a decade ago… before the internet collectively lost its mind.

Could Xbox Project Helix completely ditch physical discs?

Read more