'Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare' review: The future is dated

Space battles, interstellar conflict and wisecracking robots — three things I never expected to see in a “Call of Duty” game.

And yet, Activision’s “Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare,” the latest installment in the long running (and incredibly lucrative) franchise, offers up all that and lots more in big, meaty helpings.

For better or worse, “Infinite Warfare” is still very much a “Call of Duty” game. It’s packed with massive, exploding set pieces, fast-paced multiplayer and, of course, a new Zombies mode. But developer Infinity Ward has attempted to brought just enough changes to the “Call of Duty” formula to make the series, which has struggled to reinvent itself over the years, interesting again.

The trouble is, other shooters have done more. “Infinite Warfare” has two major competitors to contend with this season in EA’s “Battlefield 1” and “Titanfall 2,” both of which have received high praise from critics and gamers alike. So should you once again heed the call?

Space, the newest frontier

It’s clear from the start that Infinity Ward wanted “Infinite Warfare” to feel like a different kind of “Call of Duty.” The first mission in the game’s solo campaign sees you jump from a drop ship onto Jupiter’s icy moon of Europa. As you make your way across the moon’s frozen surface, Jupiter looms large above you. It’s an incredibly strange sight for anyone who’s played a “Call of Duty” game before.

The franchise, which originally put players in the boots of World War II soldiers, moved to the present day with “Call of Duty: Modern Warfare” and then the not-so-distant future with “Call of Duty: Advanced Warfare,” has officially entered full-blown sci-fi territory with “Infinite Warfare.”

Mankind has depleted Earth’s resources and colonized the solar system to harvest the other planets’ treasures. A splinter group from the Mars colony rises up against the Earth, and all-out interplanetary war ensues.

You play Lieutenant Nick Reyes of the United Nations Space Alliance (UNSA). You’re quickly promoted to captain of your own ship, the carrier Retribution, and tasked with helping to defeat the terrorist group, the Settlement Defense Front (SDF), and protect the Earth from annihilation. It’s all pretty standard sci-fi trope fare, but it’s executed with Call of Duty’s typically impressive polish and quality.

Though Reyes isn’t particularly interesting and the villainous Salen Koch (played by “Game of Thrones” star Kit Harrington’s) is about as one-dimensional they come, your new sidekick, the witty robot Ethan, makes up for it with genuinely amusing interjections. More importantly, the campaign’s ridiculous, over-the-top gameplay ensures you’ll have a blast. From a zero-G gunfight on the exterior of a skyscraper-sized spaceship to enormous bipedal battle tanks, “Infinite Warfare” is over the top in all the right ways.