
The X Button writes: "The Hitman series has been around for a long, long time, and it's unique formula offering sandboxy levels populated with incidental figures and a target to assassinate have proved a draw for gamers for many years. The demo level on offer see's Agent 47 venturing into a Chinatown market street to take down a crime boss who likes to hang out at the pagoda in the centre of town. His sole mission is to kill the target, any way possible. Naturally, he's guarded by a platoon of bent cops, so getting close enough to do the deed will be trickier than it sounds..."

Feral Interactive will release IO Interactive-developed stealth action game Hitman: Absolution for Switch on November 13 for $29.99 / £19.99 / €24.99, the developer announced.

When Hitman 3 recently changed its name to Hitman World of Assassination, fans had no idea how meaningful the moment was. On the outside it looked like a simple thing: Hitman 3 would now be known by this name and include levels from Hitman 2 and 3 - the trilogy would all be in one place. But on the inside, at IO Interactive, much more was going on.
You mean destroyed it with this tethered single-player campaign BS... And only the first few levels of the third modern game were on the disc! I'll never support this crap at any price-point! They've lost me as a customer.

The last 10 years of Hitman have been full of highs and lows. And David Bateson and Jane Perry have been there with the series through this eventful decade.
Hitman is, and has been, a remarkable series developed by some of the best. Some are better than others, but every Hitman is challenging and fun.
Sure, there have been some stumbles and fumbles, but always in pursuit of the perfect Hitman game. The most recent trilogy is a masterclass in level design.