FIRST LOOK FAR CRY PRIMAL

PS4, Xbox One, PC

In recent years, the Far Cry series has done a fine job of taking gamers on semi-regular holidays to tropical locations. Sure, you often find yourself fighting off vicious honey badgers with your bare hands, or accidentally joining an armed rebellion against a warlord, but that’s just part of living like a local, right?

But Ubisoft’s latest excursion isn’t just in a different continent, it takes place in an entirely different time. Primal is set in the Mesolithic period of around 10,000BC, where it’s sabretooth tigers and woolly mammoths you have to worry about, not some pesky woodland critter (although admittedly one with a very bad temper).

That means your position on the food chain is far more precarious than normal, as you’ll have to hunt to survive, using whatever primitive weaponry you can craft from foraged wood, stones and bits of old bone. It’s a long way from the rocket launchers you used to conquer Kyrat in FC4. You play as Takkar, the only surviving member of a clan, which makes you an easy target for other tribes looking to nick all the stuff you’ve hoarded.

If previous Far Cry games are anything to go by, you’ll probably find yourself dabbling in the supernatural, although with the internal combustion engine and even the bicycle still a few thousand years from being invented, it’ll be interesting to see how Ubisoft deals with traversing the land of Oros’s high peaks and vast forests without vehicular assistance. But then that’s all in a day’s work for a Stone Age homo sapiens.


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THE CAMERA THAT LETS YOU DO THE FLYIN’

DJI Osmo
₨66,221 / avcsindia.com

Worried that all these dronecams are going to stop you using your jetpack? Say hi to Osmo.

● Maybe it’s the red tape…
Watching the legal eagles sticking their beaks into all aspects of personal and commercial drone flying, you can imagine DJI being keen to launch a camera that doesn’t need a licence. Or, more likely, it’s seen the opportunity to get its camera and stabilising gimbal tech into people’s hands for a reasonable price. Either way, the Osmo is DJI’s 4K Zenmuse X3 camera, sitting on top of a threeaxis gimbal, sitting on top of a handheld control stick. Tripod and accessory mounts, extension arms and a bike mount give you shooting options if you need your hands free. Those jetpacks don’t fly themselves.

● It’s well quality.
You can buy a naked Osmo and mount any of DJI’s cameras, but the one that comes bundled here has a 1/2.3in Sony Exmor R CMOS sensor coupled to a 20mm, f/2.8 lens with a 94° field of view. Video quality options are comprehensive: 4096x2160 4K at 24fps or 3840x2160 4K at 30fps; plus up to a slow-mo-tastic 120fps in 1080p. Stills are 12MP, and DJI points out that the gimbal stabilisation lets you take creative long-exposure shots with the camera held in your wobbly hand.

● Enjoy direct directing.
Controls on the pole let you take advantage of the motors in the gimbal. There’s an auto photo panorama mode, for example. But you can also manually control the camera – you are the drone now, after all. But if you insist: -35° to 135° tilt, 320° of pan and -50° to 90° of roll are all under your thumb. If you can do that and still shoot straight while, say, riding on the back of a dolphin, we will buy you a pint. (A safe bet for us: the Osmo isn’t waterproof.)


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