I'm not sure where the expression of love I have for my SO has came from, but I need to write it down somewhere. Having just finished the first series of Sense8, the exploration of relationships, on all levels, of romance; friendship; family and sexuality has awoken my realisation at just how lucky I am to have found my significant other. We initially met on Tinder, my first encounter using the dating app, and I matched with them because they looked so handsome, that impeccable jawline; big brown beautiful eyes and such an infectious smile, as we messaged each other, their sense of humour was just brilliant. I thought that there was absolutely no chance in hell they would agree to go on a date with me. But they did. And roll on date day. I'm choked with a cold virus; runny nose; spluttering cough and a headache from hell. But something inside me said: "Suck it up, do it, take some paracetamol and get out there and meet them". I was sat at a table upstairs in the cafe, with a view of the entrance.
In Season 5 when McNulty and Greggs go to Quantico for the psych profile, the director of behavioral science "Arthur Tolman" comes in to greet them and show off. McNulty and Greggs admit they've never worked a serial killer--they just work murders ina city that averages 300 a year. The FBI agents say Tolman was the lead investigator on the Unabomber and McNulty points out they took 16 years to catch him, and that was only because his brother reported him. If you've ever read The Riverman (by Robert Keppel) he talks about how when Behavioral Science was running wild interviewing serial killers and setting up Vi-CAP, he and a lot of local homicide police were pissed that they--veteran homicide investigators who had worked dozens or hundreds of murders--had to turn over investigations to FBI agents like Douglas and Ressler who had never worked a single murder before. Nice to see how Ed Burns and the other BPD police involved in making The Wire work that sort of sentiment in.
Pros: Highly assured storytelling and presentation, with a great villain and spectacular final act. Ray-tracing works very well amongst the skyscrapers, as does fast-loading and other next gen tricks. Cons: The combat and stealth elements remain very repetitive and overly easy. The amount the game steals from Batman: Arkham is still outrageous. Score: 8/10 Formats: PlayStation 5 (reviewed) and PlayStation 4 Price: £49. 99 Publisher: Sony Interactive Entertainment Developer: Insomniac Games Release Date: 12th November 2020 Age Rating: 16 Email, leave a comment below, and follow us on Twitter. MORE: PS5 console review - a positive start to a new generation MORE: Astro's Playroom review - introducing the PS5 MORE: PS5 sales will be online only on launch day, no more pre-orders Follow Metro Gaming on Twitter and email us at For more stories like this, check our Gaming page.