Close Menu
PixelArena.io
    What's Hot
    New Release

    What makes American football-themed video games so fun to play?

    Featured

    The Ghost of Glamping Builds on the First Game

    PC

    Star Rail Ahead of 3.6

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get The Latest News, Updates, And Amazing Offers

    Important Pages:
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Trending
    • AI-Generated Influencers: How Virtual Personalities Are Reshaping Digital Marketing and Online Entertainment
    • 007 First Light review – a flowing thriller that blends occasional sandboxy spying into an exotic rollercoaster ride
    • Lego Batman: The 13 best Skills to unlock first
    • Sweep Tosho Kicks Off Umamusume June 2026 Banner Schedule
    • FlexStrike wireless fight stick, Pulse Elevate wireless speakers, PlayStation’s 27” Gaming Monitor – PixelArena.io
    • Next Week on XBOX: New Games for June 1 to 5
    • New Hakuoki Memoirs: Drifting Clouds Otome Game Is Tenun no Shou
    • 3.0 Zenless Zone Zero Stream Set and PS5 and Xbox Collector’s Edition Pre-Orders Start
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    PixelArena.io
    • News

      Black Ops 6 Season 3 Release Date & Countdown

      June 1, 2026

      Where does Pixels go next?

      May 31, 2026

      Spanish Authorities Order Polymarket and Kalshi Blocked over Gambling Laws

      May 30, 2026

      Why Dice Games Still Dominate Crypto Casinos

      May 28, 2026

      ‘Congratulations to the Dumocrat Party!’: Al Green lost Texas primary race, and Trump sends out a bizarre message of felicitation to his party

      May 27, 2026
    • New Release

      AI-Generated Influencers: How Virtual Personalities Are Reshaping Digital Marketing and Online Entertainment

      June 1, 2026

      Hell Let Loose: Vietnam Release Date Announced

      May 31, 2026

      Shared Screens and Split Decision: Why Local Multiplayer Still Rules

      May 30, 2026

      The King of Fighters AFK introduces a new legendary fighter with Nakoruru

      May 29, 2026

      Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 Preview – Modern Warfare 4 Is Returning To Basics While Improving On Its Gunplay

      May 28, 2026
    • Reviews

      007 First Light review – a flowing thriller that blends occasional sandboxy spying into an exotic rollercoaster ride

      June 1, 2026

      Coffee Talk Tokyo PC Review

      May 31, 2026

      Yoshi and the Mysterious Book Review

      May 30, 2026

      Compass Review: Fly The Friendly Skies

      May 29, 2026

      Review: Mina the Hollower Is Another Yacht Club Games Success Story

      May 28, 2026
    • PC

      Sweep Tosho Kicks Off Umamusume June 2026 Banner Schedule

      June 1, 2026

      Intel just announced two powerful new gaming handheld CPUs, and the timing couldn’t be better

      May 31, 2026

      Backrooms to triple previous A24 opening weekend record at $85+ million

      May 30, 2026

      GFN Thursday: ‘007 First Light’ on GeForce NOW

      May 29, 2026

      Sweet Hamster Days Dating Sim Demo Appears on Steam

      May 28, 2026
    • PlayStation

      FlexStrike wireless fight stick, Pulse Elevate wireless speakers, PlayStation’s 27” Gaming Monitor – PixelArena.io

      June 1, 2026

      Modern Warfare 4 — Campaign, Multiplayer, and DMZ launches October 23 – PixelArena.io

      May 31, 2026

      The Withered World Stars Bianca & Nera

      May 30, 2026

      Play NBA The Run open beta on PS5 this weekend – PixelArena.io

      May 29, 2026

      Ingrid Is the Last Street Fighter 6 World Tour Character

      May 28, 2026
    • Xbox

      Next Week on XBOX: New Games for June 1 to 5

      June 1, 2026

      Minecraft Movie Build Challenge | Minecraft

      May 31, 2026

      FFXIV 2026 Make It Rain Campaign and Senior Otter Items Appear

      May 30, 2026

      A New Challenger Appears! – Mr. Karate Brings Kyokugenryu to Fatal Fury: City of the Wolves 

      May 29, 2026

      Resident Evil Requiem Demo Has Grace and Leon Sections

      May 28, 2026
    • Nintendo

      New Hakuoki Memoirs: Drifting Clouds Otome Game Is Tenun no Shou

      June 1, 2026

      Review: Starbites Feels Like a Budget Switch RPG

      May 31, 2026

      Inazuma Eleven: Victory Road Free Kick-Off DLC Adds Three Major Features

      May 30, 2026

      Suikoden II Character Gashapon Has Figures and Acrylic Stands

      May 29, 2026

      Dragon Quest V Character Debora Returns in New Dragon Quest Monsters

      May 28, 2026
    • Mobile

      3.0 Zenless Zone Zero Stream Set and PS5 and Xbox Collector’s Edition Pre-Orders Start

      June 1, 2026

      New Zayne Love and Deepspace Voice Actor Confirmed

      May 29, 2026

      Final Fantasy VII Ever Crisis Dirge of Cerberus: FFVII Storyline Ends

      May 28, 2026

      Sephiroth Is a Limited Dissidia Duellum Final Fantasy Character

      May 27, 2026

      Petit Planet Area Load Limit, Blueprint Sharing, and Cooking Changes in the Works

      May 26, 2026
    • Hardwares

      Loft Dynamics Brings VR Helicopter Training Simulator to Japan

      May 29, 2026

      Proto & Holomedia Power New AI Concierge Hologram at LaGuardia

      May 27, 2026

      Distance AR Optics to Be Integrated Into Galvion Head Systems

      May 24, 2026

      XREAL and Google Preview Project Aura XR Glasses at Google I/O

      May 23, 2026

      Meta Opens Display Access for Ray-Ban Display Developers

      May 22, 2026
    • Software

      How to Use TikTok Templates to Spice Up Your Content

      June 1, 2026

      YouTube Shorts Monetization: How To Grow Your YouTube Channel with Shorts

      May 31, 2026

      How to Get Youtube Sponsorships for Small Channels and Creators

      May 30, 2026

      Pins and Profits: How Pinterest Ecommerce Can Help Your Brand | NeoReach

      May 29, 2026

      How to Make Engaging Instagram Carousels | NeoReach

      May 28, 2026
    • Guides

      Lego Batman: The 13 best Skills to unlock first

      June 1, 2026

      How to Get the Gala Invitation in 007 First Light

      May 31, 2026

      Minecraft Crafting Essentials: How to Craft Paper

      May 30, 2026

      Fable gets pushed back into 2027, but we’re at least getting a “major new look” at it at the Xbox Games Showcase

      May 29, 2026

      007 First Light: All Intel locations

      May 28, 2026
    • E-Sport

      Moving the Esports World Cup to Paris shouldn’t negate the concerns surrounding the event

      June 1, 2026

      RLCS Paris Major proved Rocket League belongs in France, but it could have finally extinguished North America

      May 31, 2026

      Esports World Cup’s Paris move marks the city as a rising esports capital

      May 30, 2026

      IEM Cologne Major has massive $1.25 million prize pool, but the real money lies elsewhere

      May 29, 2026

      Ludwig buying Rivals of Aether II’s registration numbers adds to the manufactured and forced hype of Evo this year

      May 28, 2026
    • Entertainment

      Shakira Gives Ugandan Dance Group Ghetto Kids Her Stamp of Approval

      June 1, 2026

      Ozzy Osbourne’s Final Memoir Includes One Very Unexpected Late-Life Obsession

      May 31, 2026

      Rosario Tijeras Season 5: Release Date, Cast, and Trailer

      May 30, 2026

      Usher Checks into Las Vegas for a Tight 24-Hour Window

      May 29, 2026

      Tom Hardy’s MobLand Future Gets Murkier After New On-Set Allegations

      May 28, 2026
    • Movies

      Kane Parsons’ Backrooms Spells a YouTube Conquest of the Film Biz

      June 1, 2026

      Gal Gadot and Julian Schnabel’s ‘In The Hand Of Dante’ Arrives on Netflix June 24

      May 31, 2026

      Director Kane Parsons ‘certainly’ planning more Backrooms movies

      May 30, 2026

      Dove Cameron, Sofia Carson, Descendants Celebrate Cameron Boyce’s Birthday

      May 29, 2026

      A Custom 2004 Atelier Versace Design Anchors Jennifer Lopez’s ‘Office Romance’ Premiere Look

      May 28, 2026
    • Featured

      Preview: Chivalware Plays With Battle Network Style Combat

      June 1, 2026

      Interview: Talking to Holostars Vtuber Banzoin Hakka Ahead of His Mini 3D Live

      May 31, 2026

      The Video Games You Should Play This Weekend – May 29

      May 30, 2026

      “They have the biggest bullsh*t detectors on the planet”: How the unlikely EVE Online x Google DeepMind AI partnership landed with players

      May 29, 2026

      Interview: Developing the Roguelike CRYMELIGHT

      May 28, 2026
    PixelArena.io
    Home»Reviews»007 First Light review – a flowing thriller that blends occasional sandboxy spying into an exotic rollercoaster ride
    Reviews June 1, 2026

    007 First Light review – a flowing thriller that blends occasional sandboxy spying into an exotic rollercoaster ride

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp Copy Link
    007 First Light review – a flowing thriller that blends occasional sandboxy spying into an exotic rollercoaster ride
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp Copy Link

    007 First Light review

    A thoroughly enjoyable action romp built on the foundations of Hitman, but closer in spirit to Indiana Jones and the Great Circle.

    • Developer:
      IO Interactive
    • Publisher:
      IO Interactive
    • Release: May 26th 2026
    • On: Windows
    • From: Steam
    • Price: £59.99/€69.99/$69.99
    • Reviewed on: Intel Core i7-12700F, 16GB RAM, Nvidia RTX 3060 Ti, Windows 11

    007 First Light is built on the bones of IO Interactive’s Hitman, and makes no effort to hide that fact. But it’s far from just Agent 47 in a wig and doing his best posh English boarding school accent. The section that properly convinced me of this, ironically, is when First Light gets closest to resembling one of Hitman’s murder sandboxes.

    James Bond has been Bondily bundled off to a remote resort in Vietnam, to help solve some bureaucratic bother with his trademark extreme Bondulence. Arriving in the guise of toff holidaymaker St John Smythe, wearer of a garish pink shirt and short shorts, Bond immediately starts being a smarmy dick to the staff. There’s a clear difference between this behaviour and Bond’s usual mannerisms, despite both being strains of the same insufferably establishment Englishness that infests the southernmost reaches of Sadness Island like a particularly nasty case of genital warts. Bond is a smug git, a symbol of mainstream English aspirations and ideals as he’s always been, but he’s got enough unique substance behind his buttery witticisms and self-satisfied grin not to be an insufferable presence.

    As with all of his predecessors, Patrick Gibson’s Bond drips with privilege and leads a life no regular person can relate to in anything more than very abstract terms. Yet, I’ve still really enjoyed spending time in his designer loafers. In this Vietnam mission, he wanders around The Pearl, the exact sort of ludicrously luxurious paradise for the ultra-rich that IO have become masters of bringing to life through years of CEO-death-backdrop-sculpting for Agent 47’s ops. For a lot of its runtime First Light is a deliberately pacey romp from action set piece to infiltration sequence, but here IO pump the brakes just a little, freeing you up to hunt opportunities to make three targets swallow one of Q’s magical techno-cocktails. These sections aren’t as complex or leash-free as a Hitman level, but the eavesdropping on conversations and finding ways into restricted areas nails a similar rush.

    Rather than poisoning drinks so he can follow queasy guards into the loo and nick their clothes, Bond relies on a suite of special watch-powered MI6 gadgets to get what he wants. Staff get briefly blinded by a quick blast of his watch strap-mounted laser so Bond can pilfer their keycards, the same vomit-inducement 47 relies on is dispensed via a dart fired from 007’s phone, or a camera flash can be used to fire a stunning burst of electricity. Oh and the classic pen that doubles as a rocket launcher is also present and accounted for, in case things get really hairy. Hitman’s always had its own gadgetry, but First Light’s emphasis on these cartoony contraptions certainly helps its more open sections not feel like a bald assassin tribute act. Bond also has a power MI6 could only dream of bottling up. The ability to tell a big fat lie when caught in a restricted area, which temporarily pacifies groups of enemies so you’ve got a window to get in and out sharpish.


    James Bond talks to M in 007 First Light.
    Image credit: PixelArena.io / IO Interactive

    Though, the fact First Light’s designed from the ground up not to have both melee and gun combat be a last resort does a lot of the heavy lifting. Lest you fear you’re walking into Call of Duty, Bond’s bound by the strict codes of the MI6 rulebook not to go into massacre mode the moment the stealthy approach will no longer cut it. His first resort is his fists, locked and loaded for a fairly typical action game blend of sneaky button-press takedowns, quick bursts of battering to take down small groups before they call for backup, and open brawling based around punches, timed parries/dodges, and the ability to throw blocking foes into walls.

    I’ve found the latter the toughest and most frustrating aspect of First Light. That’s not a total surprise. I’ve long struggled with timed parrying in games which aren’t charitable with their reaction windows, but Bond often feels like he’s given up on blocking towards the end of an enemy’s two-or-three-hit flurries. The kicks which finish such sequences are particularly nasty and absorbing just one tends to leave Bond barely standing. Melee hits from enemies on the standard difficulty might be tuned up a tad too high, with baddies feeling like they can tank about 20 punches while Bond’s done for in three to five tops. Ironically, I’ve had an easier time using my fists when I run out of bullets in gunfights than when the battle’s billed as a boxing match from the off.

    In order for Bond to whip out his gun, someone has to shoot at him first, at which point he goes into licence to kill mode. An arsenal of pistols, rifles, SMGs, shotguns, and the occasional sniper rifle can be used to plink foes to death with bodyshots or take them out with a single uber-satisfying headshot. Well, unless they’re a tank, in which case they’ve had the good sense to pop on a helmet you’ll need to shoot off before turning their brains to mush in the name of king and country. While nothing totally fresh, First Light’s gunplay is slick and simple to get to grips with, and shootouts boast numerous enough enemies that you never feel like you’re breezing through too easily.


    James Bond fires a sniper rifle at baddies in 007 First Light.
    Image credit: PixelArena.io / IO Interactive

    The brief driving sections, on the other hand, have clearly been designed to serve as no more than conveyor belts between action set pieces (and an opportunity to show off Aston Martin, Jaguar, and Land Rover’s brand placements). Cars, bin lorries, and even a dump truck have no tangible feel to them as you turn, jump and smash through objects. That said, these sections are never any more than brief breathers between being dumped back onto foot or into a cutscene, so the fact they’re miles away from what you’d need in a racing game or even the likes of GTA isn’t too big a deal. You’re far more concerned with watching the cinematic destruction unfold than you are trying to get a proper drift on.

    Finally, get ready for some quicktime events, baby! You will press A to do push-ups! You will hammer X to break the grip of an enemy in the latter stages of a boss fight! You will push a different button to set off an explosion in very cinematic fashion! You will flick the right stick to tie a bow tie! You will also press Y to select one of seven watch strap colours! That last one, luckily for me, doesn’t have a timer attached to it. All of this is as meh as quicktime events always are, if a serviceable way of giving you something to do in set pieces that’re intimately choreographed.

    As for the tale of Bondulence that these many secret agent activities power you through, it’s one that to my eye fits in well with the plots explored by Bond movies since the cold war sputtered out. Bond’s battles with the likes of international crime syndicate SPECTRE were arguably a bit ahead of the curve we’ve seen with the likes of military shooters moving away from traditional nation vs nation battles of jingoistic patriotism to more apolitical battles with felons or rogues. So is true here, with the central battle pitched around internal conflict over the future direction of MI6.


    James Bond tying a bowtie via quicktime event in 007 First Light.
    Image credit: PixelArena.io / IO Interactive

    Here’s your warning to skip the next few paragraphs if you don’t want any spoilers more specific than that last line.

    As IO teased prior to release, First Light’s conflict is a philosophical debate between man and machine. Its Bond starts off as a new recruit to a 00 programme restarted by a freshly promoted M following a decade or so of MI6 opting to entrust the thrust of their espionage to a supercomputer dubbed Theia, rather than flesh and blood superspies. Bond, naturally, is a complete counterweight to that data-driven approach, a brash and instinct-driven human positively overflowing with disregard for what the numbers say.

    Initially, that recklessness sours most of his new colleagues on him, but because he’s brimming with charming Bondiness, he’s able to gradually break down everyone’s walls through the power of smiles and well-timed one-liners. The early hours, which are also very tutorial-heavy, focus on establishing Bond’s relationships with his fellow 00 recruits. Cressida and Monroe, the pair of them who become his flatmates, are given a commendable amount of fleshing out as decent mates despite being higher on the toff-o-meter than Bond himself. It all feels very much like a cheery spy university, up until a mission which turns Bond’s world upside down. The narrative’s breakneck pace doesn’t allow the spy lots of time to confront the shredding of his idyllic and chummy existence in the fashion a more expansive or openly structured game might. That said, it dedicates at least as much time to dealing with the loss as a Bond movie would. Young Bond also arguably isn’t yet at a point in his character arc where he’s endured enough emotional punishment that his stiff upper lip should start to wobble a bit more noticeably.

    With that as the emotional underpinning, Bond and his more experienced superiors also grow closer as they grapple with the threat that emerges, the emotional journey that the young spy and his dour mentor John Greenway go on being a particular highlight. Encounters with mysterious thief Isola Vale, more than a match for Bond in the wits department, also stand out memorably. The baddies, on the other hand, aren’t very memorable. Lenny Kravitz’s African underworld overlord Bawma, for example, makes a surprisingly brief cameo that ends rather unsatisfyingly. Reverberating around the entire plot thematically is the subject of AI, how it’s used, and how much humanity should be comfortable relying on it. While a Bond game’s never going to pause the action to write a thought-provoking essay delving deep into all of arguments at play in that particular nest of wasps, in my estimation First Light’s writers have done a good job of not getting lost in buzzwords and presenting the issue of the day in a way which matches the fairly down to earth tone they’re going for.

    Right, we’re out of spoilerville.


    James Bond talks to Cressida and Monroe in 007 First Light.
    Image credit: PixelArena.io / IO Interactive

    Overall, 007 First Light’s a thoroughly enjoyable romp I recommend to any fan of the Bond films, games, or IO’s work on Hitman. It certainly lacks the replayability that’s long been one of the strongest points of the latter’s sandbox levels, so the ability to enjoy a more linear action world tour’s a must. Well, unless First Light’s more arcadey tactical simulation mode, which has you replay mission sections with quirky new rulesets à la Hitman’s escalations, really takes off. As of right now, though, I think the main story’ll remain First Light’s calling card.

    With that in mind, I reckon its legacy will be more in line with that of MachineGames’ Indiana Jones and the Great Circle than any of Agent 47’s recent adventures. A reference-stuffed blend of game and movie built on the tried and tested foundations of a well-established developer’s main offerings. One well worth seeing the credits of, even if you put it down for a good while not long after they roll.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Copy Link
    Previous ArticleLego Batman: The 13 best Skills to unlock first
    Next Article AI-Generated Influencers: How Virtual Personalities Are Reshaping Digital Marketing and Online Entertainment

    Related Posts

    Coffee Talk Tokyo PC Review

    Yoshi and the Mysterious Book Review

    Compass Review: Fly The Friendly Skies

    Review: Mina the Hollower Is Another Yacht Club Games Success Story

    Mina the Hollower Review – Refined Throwback

    The Alters review

    Bungie is Not Really at Fault Over Destiny 2’s Shutdown

    Real Madrid Turns Club Atmosphere Into One of Apple Immersive’s Biggest Wins

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Top Picks
    Featured

    Exit 8 Director Genki Kawamura Discusses Adapting The Game, Narrative Inspirations, And Advice From Shigeru Miyamoto

    Featured April 21, 2026
    News

    11Bit Studios Responds To The Alters Generative AI Controversy

    News June 30, 2025
    Entertainment

    Avatar: The Last Airbender Season 2 Release Date, Cast, and More

    Entertainment February 25, 2026
    Xbox

    Street Fighter 6 Gets Avatar Arcade and Random Matches Modes 

    Xbox May 22, 2026
    New Release

    Robocop Rogue City Unfinished Business Review: Thrilling Old-School FPS Action

    New Release August 27, 2025

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get The Latest News, Updates, And Amazing Offers

    Editors Picks
    Guides March 21, 2026

    My favorite Minecraft spin-off is getting a sequel, and it’s coming in 2026

    New Release May 30, 2025

    EA Reveals College Football 26 Gameplay Additions And Improvements Alongside First Trailer

    Xbox December 5, 2025

    Next Week on Xbox: New Games for December 8 to 12

    PlayStation January 29, 2026

    Death Stranding 2 Keychains Include Cryptobiotes and Boots

    About Us
    About Us

    Your ultimate source for gaming news, delivering the latest updates, reviews, and insights from the gaming world. Stay informed, entertained, and ahead of the game with our comprehensive coverage of all things gaming.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Our Picks
    Nintendo

    Dragon Quest Treasures, The Game Awards | All Things Nintendo

    News

    Sony is reportedly shutting down Dark Outlaw Games, run by former Call of Duty director

    Mobile

    6 Dissidia Duellum Final Fantasy Abilities Getting Buffed

    Top Reviews
    New Release

    AI-Generated Influencers: How Virtual Personalities Are Reshaping Digital Marketing and Online Entertainment

    Reviews

    007 First Light review – a flowing thriller that blends occasional sandboxy spying into an exotic rollercoaster ride

    Guides

    Lego Batman: The 13 best Skills to unlock first

    © 2026 PixelArena.io.
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.