PCMag editors select and review products independently. If you buy through affiliate links, we may earn commissions, which help support our testing.

FarCry 3 (Xbox 360)

 & Jeffrey L. Wilson Managing Editor, Apps and Gaming

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

Our Expert
LOOK INSIDE PC LABS HOW WE TEST
65 EXPERTS
43 YEARS
41,500+ REVIEWS
Ubisoft's ambitious FarCry 3 gives gamers plenty of action-packed fun in a gorgeous, expansive world, but bugs and a clunky UI dulls the experience. - Microsoft Xbox 360 Games
3.5 Good

The Bottom Line

Ubisoft's ambitious FarCry 3 gives gamers plenty of action-packed fun in a gorgeous, expansive world, but bugs and a clunky UI dulls the experience.

Buy It Now

Pros & Cons

    • Large world to explore.
    • Thrilling shooting action.
    • Gorgeous environments.
    • Multiple endings.
    • Solid characterization.
    • Confusing, over-complicated interface.
    • Potentially game ending bugs.
    • Ho-hum plot.

FarCry 3 (PC) Specs

ESRB Rating: M for Mature
Genre: Action Games
Platform: Xbox 360

Sometimes bro-ing it with the brahs can go horribly, horribly wrong. As in deathly wrong.

FarCry 3, the latest entry in Ubisoft's first-person shooting series, puts you in the role of Jason Brody, a 20-something who's kidnapped—along with his brother and friends—by pirates while they're partying on a Pacific island. Brody, after escaping from his jungle-prison, becomes a reluctant hero as he takes it upon himself to rescue his missing friends hidden away on a dangerous fictional island. And thus begins an adventure filled with peril, gunplay and, unfortunately, peril.

Danger Island
It's easy to dismiss FarCry 3 as just another FPS, but that would do the game a gross disservice. The meat of the game, admittedly, involves blowing enemies away in a first-person perspective. That said, Ubisoft gives player numerous tools and abilities to flesh out the experience—and they work well. FarCry 3 deftly guides gamers through the long-range and melee-game mechanics by presenting scenarios that build on what you've previously learned. You'll learn to sneak, distract foes, and stealth kill all within a few minutes time of booting the disc.

The game world is huge and highly detailed; lush jungles, hills, and riverbeds give you plenty of areas to explore and look great on screen. The world map is filled with icons that show where particular animals, towers, and other items are located, which makes navigation simple. Consulting your map is essential for completing particular tasks. Thankfully, you can fast travel back to your home base to save on long-distance walking/running/driving.

Wonderful Toys
Ubisoft gives player a plethora of firearms to ventilate foes and wildlife. Guns are purchasable from shops, but you can also pick up hand cannons free of charge if you manage to reactivate radio towers that litter the landscape. Those re-powered towers don't simply give you new weapons, but maps, missions, and other goodies, too.

Crafting—a feature often associated with PC RPGs—makes an appearance in FarCry 3. You can blend the native flora into healing concoctions, transform animal hides you'e skinned into sacks that let you carry more gear, and more. There's a surprising amount of items to mix together to form items that will help you survive in the harsh environment. Mastering these skills is just as important as mastering your aim, and it gives the non-shooting segments significance.

You can also purchase skills which give you new abilities like stealth killing, jungle running, and combat archery. Each skill that you acquire scores you a tattoo, a mark of your success as a warrior among the rebel native populace who's warring against the pirate faction.

Thunder in Paradise
The FarCry 3 experience is sullied by two issues: a somewhat confusing interface and bugs. The first problem is one that Ubisoft plans to address with a UI patch—and it's much needed. Switching weapons is simple, but the menu screens that house your skill tree and crafting materials are difficult to read as they're overcrowded with information. The constant alert pop ups that notify you of mission statuses and new skills are highly annoying, too.

That, however, pales in comparison to the bugs—some game-ending—reported by several gamers. Some of stated that they had to abandoned their games and start from scratch during the "Saving Private Oliver" mission. Others have reported being unable to cycle through weapons. I didn't experience anything that horrid, but my game did freeze on several occasions. Buggy titles, unfrotunately, an increasingly common ill in modern gaming across the board an is one that I hope gets remedied as we enter the new console generation.

The Wrap
FarCry 3, in terms of pure gameplay, is an engaging shooter that's one of this generation's best, but bugs and a clunky interface keep it (for now) from moving into the upper-echelon with the likes of Halo 4  . Those are, hopefully, problems that Ubisoft will repair in the near future.

More Video Game Reviews:
•   Star Wars: Jedi Challenges
•   Twitch.tv
•   Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Wildlands (for PC)
•   Nvidia GeForce Now
•   Forza Horizon 3 (for PC)
•  more

Final Thoughts

Ubisoft's ambitious FarCry 3 gives gamers plenty of action-packed fun in a gorgeous, expansive world, but bugs and a clunky UI dulls the experience. - Microsoft Xbox 360 Games

FarCry 3 (Xbox 360)

3.5 Good

Ubisoft's ambitious FarCry 3 gives gamers plenty of action-packed fun in a gorgeous, expansive world, but bugs and a clunky UI dulls the experience.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Jeffrey L. Wilson

Jeffrey L. Wilson

Managing Editor, Apps and Gaming

Since 2004, I've written about consumer tech for many publications, including 1UP, Laptop, Parenting, Sync, Wise Bread, and WWE. I now apply that knowledge and skill set as the managing editor of PCMag's apps and gaming team.

The Technology I Use

As a member of the App & Gaming team, I use a wide variety of apps and services. Google Drive is an essential file-syncing service for moving documents between team members in this work-from-home era. Scrivener has been an invaluable writing tool as I rework my fiction manuscript. YouTube Premium and YouTube TV deliver hours of entertainment (though I only use the latter service during the F1 and NBA playoff seasons).

In terms of hardware, I use a Lenovo Thinkpad Carbon X1 laptop for work and an Origin PC tower for playing PC games. I also have a Steam Deck, which lets me play my favorite titles under a shade tree. Of course, I have a smartphone, and the Google Pixel 9a is my handset of choice.

My main input devices are the Das Keyboard 4 Professional and Logitech MX Vertical Ergonomic Mouse, though I bust out the Hori Fighting Commander Octa or Hori Fight Stick Alpha when mixing it up in fighting games. I have a thing for arcade sticks. I collect Neo Geo AES games, too, but only if I can find the carts on the (relative) cheap.

For video and music consumption, I fire up my Lenovo Tab P11; it has a sharp screen and great Dolby Atmos-powered speakers. My Kindle Paperwhite has received much use, too. I have a standalone, Sony Blu-ray player connected to a TCL television when it's time to go full cinephile. I'm also a vinyl guy, so the Bluetooth-enabled Audio-Technica AT-LP60XBT keeps the wax spinning.

My first computer was a Commodore 64. Long live BASIC and retro computers!

Read full bio