Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora
Common Sense Media Review
By Chad Sapieha , based on child development research. How do we rate?
Action game based on film has powerful themes; violence.
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Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora
Parent and Kid Reviews
Based on 1 parent review
What’s It About?
Set during the events of James Cameron's Avatar films, AVATAR: FRONTIERS OF PANDORA begins in a residential school set up by humans on the planet Pandora and populated with a small group of Na'vi children who've been ripped away from their parents and denied their culture. They're instead taught how to act and behave like humans so that they can serve as ambassadors with their own people. Treated brutally by their captors, the children are eventually aided by one of their human teachers and escape. Players take on the role of one of these students who must relearn how to connect with nature and live in harmony with the environment. They move about a lush, free-to-explore world bursting with vibrant flora and fauna, harvesting resources that can be used to craft gear and restore energy, and taking on quests from both human and Na'vi allies. They do this while actively fighting off human soldiers who have orders to kill all Na'vi on sight.
Is It Any Good?
Developer Ubisoft took a pretty big swing on this one but came up a bit short. Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora earns major props for presentation, giving players a sprawling and luscious world loaded with fascinating natural wonders to discover using your special Na'vi senses, such as plants with flowers that explode and massive animals with horns the length of cars. The story also provides interesting new details about Pandora and the struggle between the colonizing humans and the local Na'vi that fans of the films and their lore will hungrily devour. If nothing else, it provides the sense that there's more to the Na'vi's resistance to the human occupation and invasion than what's going on with film protagonist Jake Sully and his tribe.
That said, there's also something strangely empty about the adventure, at least compared to Ubisoft's other open world games. Most of the characters aren't as fleshed out or interesting as one might expect, and the story, though charged with timely social commentary and biting colonial criticism, can't help but play second fiddle to the spectacular events of the films. The first-person action, meanwhile, is pretty standard for the genre, with familiar attacks and traversal movements that feel as though they were simply lifted from other games. Even the in-game menus are lackluster, with little of the thematic style or creative interactivity typically built into Ubisoft's dashboards and interfaces. Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is a capably executed and moderately fun romp around an enchanting alien planet, but it also does little to truly stand out in the crowded genre of open world action/role-playing games.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about violence in media. Avatar: Frontiers of Pandora is unusual in that it makes giant aliens the protagonists and small humans the evil aggressors that players have to kill. How did this make you feel?
Talk about the game's allegorical intent. Were you able to identify beats within the story meant to make players think about European settlers' usurping of American lands? Does viewing colonialism through a sci-fi lens make it easier to understand and identify with indigenous people?
This game has multiple accessibility options. Why is it important for video games to include accessibility options? How far has the video game industry come in this respect and what could improve?
Game Details
- Platforms: Xbox Series X/S , PlayStation 5 , Windows
- Pricing structure: Paid ($59.99)
- Available online?: Available online
- Publisher: UbiSoft
- Release date: December 7, 2023
- Genre: Action/Adventure
- Topics: Adventures , Space and Aliens , Wild Animals
- ESRB rating: T for Language, Mild Blood, Violence
- Last updated: December 11, 2023
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