REVIEW: ‘Helldivers 2’ is a deliciously enjoyable team romp

‘Helldivers 2’ has you take on the real-time battle between Super Earth and its insect and robot enemies across the galaxy. (Supplied)
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Updated 26 March 2024
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REVIEW: ‘Helldivers 2’ is a deliciously enjoyable team romp

LONDON: Fuse together “Starship Troopers” with elements of “Terminator” and “Aliens,” add a healthy dose of humor and combine with a core strong team engine of third-person gunplay and you have the new “Helldivers 2.”

Developed by Arrowhead Game Studios and published by Sony Interactive Entertainment, and available on PC and PS5, the game has you take on the real-time battle between Super Earth, a quasi-fascist entity played with tongue in cheek, and its insect and robot enemies across the galaxy.

Dropping down from heavily armed spaceships, you and a squad of up to four helldivers take on a variety of missions against various foe of different difficulties. All generally involve intense firefights and adrenaline-soaked excitement.

The core logic is your soldier can equip with one primary weapon and one smaller secondary one; but the unique selling point of the game is the role of “stratagems.”

These are reinforcements from your orbiting ship above and can range from advanced weapons to airstrikes to supply backpacks. Your access to better stratagems improves as does your level, which you acquire through successful missions and side missions on the planets you visit.

“It’s time to take out the alien trash,” shouts your instructor after a cursory training course to earn your cape before deploying into the fight. The bugs (Terminds) and robots (Automatons) are found on a range of planets with missions ranging from simple search and destroy, to rescuing civilians or setting up mining operations. The terrain can slow you down and be dangerous with volcanoes spewing deadly rocks down on your squad.

The game is simply lots of fun. Whilst you technically can take on missions by yourself, the real fun is to be had in cooperative mode against the computer-controlled enemy. Teamwork is essential for success with more powerful guns taking time to be reloaded that can be deadly without cover from a friend. Yet, friendly fire is also a challenge, particularly when calling down huge bombs on the nests of your enemy.

The game has an addictive reward mechanic that sees you level up and acquire medals, credits and resources to personalize your weapons, ship and appearance. The real-time nature of it allows the developers to announce major offensives in a part of the galaxy or to update the story as if it were a real conflict.

Despite simple controls there is a depth to weapon and ammunition choice as well as the type of stratagems you take with you that affect your approach to each mission.

Cut scenes are somewhat long and repetitive after a while and the procedurally generated worlds do not always make sense. Yet these are minor quibbles with a game that has already proven so successful that servers have buckled due to the weight of interest.


Showtime: The best television of 2025 

Updated 26 December 2025
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Showtime: The best television of 2025 

  • From belly laughs to gut punches, here are the must-watch shows of the year 

‘Adolescence’ 

This harrowing drama consisted of four episodes, all shot in a single take. It told the story of 13-year-old Jamie Miller (the debut role for Owen Cooper, who deservedly won an Emmy for his faultless performance), who is accused of murdering a schoolmate, and the aftermath of that accusation for his family. “Adolescence” was the perfect blend of style and substance; you could marvel at the “balletic production processes that must have been involved,” as our reviewer noted, even while squirming in your seat at the painfully raw performances of the excellent ensemble cast. “It may be one of the most upsetting shows released this year,” our review concluded, “but it is also a remarkable work of art.” 

‘Severance’ S2 

Apple’s absorbing sci-fi comedy-drama expanded its universe in season two, as Mark S (Adam Scott) and his team of data refiners dealt with the fallout from their successful, if brief, escape from their ‘severed’ floor — where work and out-of-work memories and personalities are controlled and delineated by a chip embedded in their brains — at Lumon, during which they tried to alert the outside world to the cruelties of their working conditions. “Creator Dan Erickson and director Ben Stiller waste no time in rediscovering the subtle blend of tangible oddness and sinister dystopian creepiness that made the first season such an uncomfortable joy,” our reviewer wrote.  

‘Stranger Things’ S5 Vol. 1 

At the time of writing, we don’t know whether volume two of the final season of this epic Eighties-set sci-fi horror drama — out Dec. 26 — will be able to maintain the quality of this first volume, but all signs are good. As our reviewer wrote of volume one: “The Duffer Brothers lay down a compelling claim to be the current best-in-class when it comes to making thrilling mainstream TV. Is there anyone better at consistently building tension, releasing it a little through comedy, action, or both, then applying the pressure once again? The four episodes fly by.” There was edge-of-the-seat action and high-stakes jeopardy aplenty, but tempered by the moments of emotional interaction that have been crucial to the show’s success. 

‘Mo’ S2 

In Mo Amer’s semi-autobiographical comedy drama, he plays Mo Najjar, a Kuwait-born Palestinian refugee living in Houston, Texas, with his mother Yusra (the superb Farah Bsieso), and his older brother Sameer (Omar Elba), who’ve been waiting more than two decades to have their asylum case heard. In season two, our reviewer said, Amer continued to explore “incredibly complex and divisive topics — family, religion, imbalance of power, exile, mental health, parenthood, multiculturalism and much more — with an artful lightness of touch, without ever taking them lightly.”  

‘Andor’ S2 

The best of the multitude of TV spinoffs from “Star Wars,” “Andor” was only two seasons long, and the majority of viewers would already have known what was coming (spoiler: the events of “Rogue One” were coming). But its story of a population rising up against the erosion of their rights was both convincing and timely. “With ‘Andor,’ (creator Tony) Gilroy and (star Diego) Luna have truly set the gold standard for what future ‘Star Wars’ can be,” our reviewer wrote. “Not just a space opera, but real stories of transformation and beauty.” 

‘The Studio’ 

With “The Studio,” Seth Rogen and his co-creators manage both to skewer Hollywood and remind us why it’s still (sometimes) great (because it can still produce shows like ‘The Studio’). The star-studded comedy about a newly appointed Hollywood studio head, Matt Remick (Grogan), who believes himself to be a supporter of great art, but quickly discovers that he’ll have to park his principles and chase the money, was as sharp a satire as you could wish to see, confronting the inherent silliness of showbusiness but remaining entertaining throughout. 

‘Slow Horses’ S5 

The fifth season of this excellent, darkly humorous espionage drama wasn’t its strongest, but even so, it trumped most of the competition. British super-spy Jackson Lamb and his crew of misfit agents at Slough House were once again embroiled in high-level conspiracies when their resident tech nerd Roddy gets a glamorous new girlfriend who everyone — or, at least, everyone except for Roddy — can see is well out of his league. That led us into a plot covering Islamic extremism, the British far-right, and much more, all held together by Gary Oldman’s scene-stealing turn as Lamb. 

‘Last One Laughing’ 

Putting a group of 10 comedians in a room for six hours and telling them not to laugh isn’t the greatest premise on paper, but this UK adaptation of the Japanese show “Documental,” featuring a stellar lineup of some of Britain’s funniest people — and host Jimmy Carr — was an absolute joy. From Joe Wilkinson being eliminated by Lou Sanders’ whispered “Naughty tortie” to eventual winner Bob Mortimer’s whimsical flights of fancy, there was so much to love about this endearingly silly show. And credit to the casting directors — the mix of comics was central to its success.