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Deus Ex: Human Revolution

  • Video Game
  • 2011
  • M
IMDb RATING
8.5/10
6.2K
YOUR RATING
Deus Ex: Human Revolution (2011)
Announcement trailer
Play trailer1:38
9 Videos
39 Photos
ActionAdventureDramaMysterySci-FiThriller

After a shadowy black ops team kidnaps several scientists security manager Adam Jensen was sworn to protect, he must harness the power of his new-found cybernetic augmentations to save their... Read allAfter a shadowy black ops team kidnaps several scientists security manager Adam Jensen was sworn to protect, he must harness the power of his new-found cybernetic augmentations to save their lives.After a shadowy black ops team kidnaps several scientists security manager Adam Jensen was sworn to protect, he must harness the power of his new-found cybernetic augmentations to save their lives.

  • Directors
    • Jean-François Dugas
    • Blade Zavier
  • Writers
    • Mary DeMarle
    • Mark Cecere
    • Taras Stasiuk
  • Stars
    • Elias Toufexis
    • Stephen Shellen
    • Andreas Apergis
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.5/10
    6.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Jean-François Dugas
      • Blade Zavier
    • Writers
      • Mary DeMarle
      • Mark Cecere
      • Taras Stasiuk
    • Stars
      • Elias Toufexis
      • Stephen Shellen
      • Andreas Apergis
    • 18User reviews
    • 3Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 4 BAFTA Awards
      • 5 wins & 16 nominations total

    Videos9

    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Trailer 1:38
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Trailer 1:58
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Trailer 1:58
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Trailer 3:17
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (VG)
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (Directors Cut: Fema Camp)
    Trailer 8:36
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (Directors Cut: Fema Camp)
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution: The Missing Link Dlc
    Trailer 1:38
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution: The Missing Link Dlc
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (Directors Cut: Van Bruggen Walkthrough
    Trailer 6:29
    Deus Ex: Human Revolution (Directors Cut: Van Bruggen Walkthrough

    Photos39

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    + 34
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    Top cast73

    Edit
    Elias Toufexis
    Elias Toufexis
    • Adam Jensen
    • (voice)
    Stephen Shellen
    Stephen Shellen
    • David Sarif
    • (voice)
    • (as Steve Shellen)
    Andreas Apergis
    Andreas Apergis
    • Francis Pritchard
    • (voice)
    • …
    Michelle Boback
    Michelle Boback
    • Megan Reed
    • (voice)
    • …
    Alain Goulem
    Alain Goulem
    • Lawrence Barrett
    • (voice)
    • (as Al Goulem)
    • …
    Arthur Holden
    Arthur Holden
    • Hugh Darrow
    • (voice)
    Paula Jean Hixson
    • Faridah Malik
    • (voice)
    Bruce Dinsmore
    Bruce Dinsmore
    • William Taggart
    • (voice)
    Michael Rudder
    • Jaron Namir
    • (voice)
    Cliff Stephens
    • Bob Page
    • (voice)
    Susan Glover
    Susan Glover
    • Athene Margoulis
    • (voice)
    • …
    Marcel Jeannin
    Marcel Jeannin
    • Wayne Haas
    • (voice)
    • …
    Matt Holland
    Matt Holland
    • Isaias Sandoval
    • (voice)
    • …
    Jane Luk
    Jane Luk
    • Zhao Yun Ru
    • (voice)
    Danny Blanco Hall
    • Zeke Sanders
    • (voice)
    • …
    Denis Akiyama
    Denis Akiyama
    • Tong Si Hung
    • (voice)
    • (as Dennis Akiyama)
    Kim Bubbs
    Kim Bubbs
    • Eliza Cassan
    • (voice)
    Leni Parker
    Leni Parker
    • Yelena Fedorova
    • (voice)
    • …
    • Directors
      • Jean-François Dugas
      • Blade Zavier
    • Writers
      • Mary DeMarle
      • Mark Cecere
      • Taras Stasiuk
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    8.56.1K
    1
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    10

    Featured reviews

    9Dark_Helmet12345

    If you like shooters and are after something different, get this!

    Deus Ex: human revolutions is one of those games that takes time to grow on you, especially if your not familiar with the series. I hadn't played any of the Deus Ex games before this and had no idea what to expect. When I first saw the trailer for this game I knew then and there that I wanted it. Guess what? I was not disappointed, and you won't be either. This game is a prequel to the original so you don't have to have played it to enjoy the story.

    Human revolutions sets itself in a futuristic, cyberpunk world. A world where technology and bionic implants have become the major focus of the worlds developers and companies. You play the role of Adam Jenson who works as the head of security for a company who focus on the development of human augmentation. Shortly after you begin the game and get a taste of how it works, things get real and Adam becomes what he dislikes the most. And this is really where it begins and your journey into the world of Deus Ex begins.

    Gameplay is mainly of the 1st person shooter variety. When you are moving around the environments your point of view will be Adam's. However when you take cover behind things like tables, barrels, or vehicles you will change to a 3rd person view. It's a little strange at first but you soon get used to it and it should become second nature. Where the game differs from your usual shooters is evident in two ways. Firstly because of Adam's new enhancements he can now upgrade and develop new abilities by the use of praxis points. Want to be invisible? No problem, want to want to jump off any height without so much as a scratch? Got you covered.

    Another reason way Human revolutions differs from other shooters is because it allows you to tackle missions in different ways. Want to go in all guns blazing, then you can. Want to take the Solid snake route and sneak through without killing your enemies?, then that's great and even encouraged. Combine that with the ability to enter buildings in multiple ways, bribe people for information to make the job easier and a questioning system that differs depending on how you respond and you have a highly re-playable game.

    The game play is great in this game, the A.I of the enemies is very acceptable. I would suggest you play on the "give me a challenge" setting to start. The weakest aspect of the game is easily the visuals, it really doesn't have the polish of some of the bigger titles out there, especially those of you coming off Gears of war or Final Fantasy. The character models do look kind of ordinary at times but it's not a game breaker. Other than that you really can't fault Human revolutions. The musical score of this game is one of the best ever and this is coming from an avid Metal gear solid fan. Sometimes I just start this game up and listen to the main menu theme for a few minutes before playing.

    So do yourself a favor and buy this or even just rent it. It tells a great story, multiple endings and ways to approach the game. I promise you that you won't regret it, it's the most refreshing shooter experience in a long while.
    9dakenzi-84104

    Classic

    Amazing game that gives you tons of freedom to how you approach level - Sneak around? Hack robots? Shoot everything up? Knock everybody down? Non-lethal playthrough? All of this is available to you with tons of interesting side-quests!

    Honestly at this point it it is a cult classic alongside Vampire Masquerade. It's essentially Cyberpunk before Cyberpunk 2077. Hoping more people become aware of this series because it's one of my personal favorites! :)
    10RM851222

    Outstanding

    Greetings from Lithuania.

    "Deus Ex: Human Revolution" (2011) is definitely one of the better games i've played upon it's release. Gameplay is great, but the story and screenplay makes this one a "hard to put down" type of experience. Graphics were great at the time, not the best, but great for superb overall experience. As i mentioned, story here is deep, rich, complex and at the same time easy to follow. The only downside of this amazing game were bosses - they were very one note or to be more specific game play with them was just simple yet sometimes very frustrating shoot- em up. Everything else is just superb.

    Overall, i highly anticipate for a "Deus Ex: Mankind Divided" (2016) which i will definitely will own, because of how "Deus Ex: Human Revolution" was great. You can take multiple chooses not only in it's game play, but as well as story. Superb, outstanding game overall.
    8TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews

    That's more like it! Living up to most of the potential

    2027(25 years before the original Deus Ex). Adam Jensen is just on the job as Security Chief at Sarif Industries, when they are attacked. He is thrown through a window, leaving his body destroyed, and passes out. He is later told that the soldier-types went on to kill his ex-wife and other scientists working there. The only way to save his life is to give him augmentations - mechanical and electronic replacements of limbs that can enable you to do things that your original ones would not(the goons mentioned had these, hence why they couldn't be stopped). Thus, we get into the ethics of this integral aspect of the franchise, and this presents good arguments for both sides, not picking one(that's up to you - and this offers more than one ending for you to choose from, as expected by now), getting into themes of xenophobia(like I said, this is not the Nanite-based ones of the other games, this is the beginning of this technology - the Half-Life-reminiscent opening(just showing up at work, nothing happening yet) has you see several people who have all black or white, plastic-y hands, or scars at their temples where their skull was opened for the surgery - and it's just seen as normal, because to them, it is, they've had it for a while... and to you, it's new and a little unsettling, because you, and our lead(one and the same), are not used to it yet), discrimination, class warfare and power struggles... in addition to giving you really cool special abilities(that, by the way, are all explained scientifically(this is highly realistic in all respects), to where it feels like these could exist in the not-too-distant future, which this really does come off as... the "alphabet agencies" are mentioned early on, and people still get "Nigerian Prince" scam spam emails, and you can find ignorant, loud-mouthed talk radio, nosy gossip magazines and nightclubs). And thankfully, they've now come up with a lot of new ones, instead of just using the same ones. You can punch through a wall and do in the guy on the other side(if there is one), completing the RoboCop analogy, slow your fall with electromagnetism(and use that to knock back and daze anyone within the blast radius, if you'd like), see through walls, turn invisible(and note that you may not be the only one who can do so...), etc. Unfortunately, they continue to combine that category with what used to be the Skills one, so some of them are upgrades to doing something that isn't inherently beyond what humans can do(like using rifles well). Also, there are "too few" of the Praxis Points that allow you to unlock them(you can do this at any time, not only at specific healing places, taking away a lot of the specialness of it), not meaning that you can't get enough of the different ones(in fact, the opposite, over the course of this, I found having way more than I had the need for(cost is the only limiting factor)... that should not happen!), but that choices are too simple(in System Shock 2, you may get 12 of the PP equivalent for a task, and for that, you can get a level 1 thing... but if you save up until you have 50 of them, you can get a #5 one, and that one may help you more, forcing you to make decisions that have consequences... as it ought to be! You're meant to do several playthroughs if you want to try the various ways to solve problems, and hey, if people today are too lazy for that - don't reward that! Let the rest of us get the full experience, and work for it). There is a ton of freedom in this, however. The several dialog options let you craft the personality of our protagonist, whose voice acting, as the rest in this, is fantastic. He talks in the "determined, unemotional action hero" manner that we expect today, still, there is just enough room for him to express emotion at times, and he does it quite convincingly, it makes it feel very "spy"-like, compartmentalizing, though there's not much that will bring him to express concern or the like, he's still human. The plot is taut, political and provocative, with so many twists that it's always moving, without being impossible to follow(think Christopher Nolan). This revamps the series, something much-needed after the second one. It provides a sleak new look and approach to this whilst maintaining the core elements, such as the paranoid mood of conspiracy(helped by the evocative score), and the game-play is smoothed out, not completely different(there is some unfortunate streamlining - then again, there are positives to that, such as the minimal controls setup being easier to keep track of). You have to get into an area and accomplish an objective, getting past guards(some of them patrolling!), cameras, robots and turrets(the last three can be hacked, or dealt with by EMP(one of the types of grenades... the others being Concussion(flashbang), Frag and Gas(highly effective at quietly and non-lethally dealing with a full room!))... sadly, the latter two thus become too weak, and are also so rare, that they don't hold anywhere near the same threat as they used to). Are you going to go in guns blazing(facing the very smart AI squad tactics), sneak past(using the excellent, intuitive cover-system, second only to that of Splinter Cell: Conviction, and one of the couple of places where it, thankfully(much more helpful that way), goes into a third person perspective, for the cinematic feel, out of the immersive FPS view... thus getting the best of both worlds) or some combination thereof? The graphics are true to life, as are the environments. Playing it as a perfectionist, this took me 69 hours(!). Hacking is addictive, tense. There is a lot of bloody violence and disturbing content, some moderate to strong language and a little sexuality in this. I recommend this to any fan of these games. 8/10
    9Junebug23057

    Best Cyberpunk game ever made

    Back in 2010, I remember being captivated by the CGI trailer for *Deus Ex: Human Revolution*. At first, I actually thought Christian Bale was the main character! Regardless, I knew right then that this game was going to be for me. I pre-ordered it without a second thought, ignoring the reviews-it was that kind of game that just resonated with me.

    And I'm happy to say, I was absolutely right! *Deus Ex: Human Revolution* is a fantastic semi-open world RPG, blending stealth and action elements effortlessly. The game is set in an alternate, semi-futuristic Detroit in the year 2027, where prosthetic limbs have become commonplace-not out of necessity, but as a way to enhance everyday life. However, these enhancements come with the catch of being dependent on an addictive drug, adding layers to the narrative filled with conspiracy and intrigue.

    You play as a private investigator working for a major prosthetic company. When your workplace is attacked and your ex-wife goes missing, you find yourself in a precarious situation that leads to a major transformation-literally. It's a gripping setup, and without giving too much away, it sets the stage for an engaging storyline.

    The gameplay revolves around exploring various streets in Detroit and some additional locales, where you can interact with NPCs to gather information or take on side quests. You have the freedom to approach missions through stealth or direct action, allowing for a personalized experience based on your play style. As you progress, you earn experience points, which help you enhance various abilities, including some that improve dialogue and persuasion-definitely a feature worth exploring.

    The side quests are truly noteworthy. Each has its unique story, and they contribute significantly to the overall world-building. Completing these quests wasn't just about leveling up; I found myself genuinely engrossed in the narratives they provided.

    Character interactions are rich and varied in this cyberpunk universe. The voice acting is top-notch, particularly from the protagonist, who helped elevate the overall experience. It's impressive how well the characters fit into this intricately crafted world.

    The soundtrack deserves a mention as well. The ambient music enhances the atmosphere beautifully and has become a favorite of mine even when not gaming.

    While the graphics are from 2011, they still hold up reasonably well, which is commendable. The weapons are interesting, offering a nice selection of sci-fi gadgets. Although there's debate on whether you need to upgrade them-especially if you prefer stealth-you'll find a blend of options that cater to different play styles. The boss fights, though met with some critique, added a nostalgic touch for me; I found them to be an enjoyable challenge.

    One minor issue I had was with the last level. It felt somewhat designed to limit your resources and powers in a way that made the final confrontation a bit more difficult than it needed to be. However, this did not diminish my overall enjoyment of the game.

    In summary, *Deus Ex: Human Revolution* offers an incredible experience, rich with storytelling, character depth, and engaging gameplay. I truly hope to see a sequel to continue this remarkable journey. It's an experience I wholeheartedly recommend, and I'm giving it a solid 9/10!

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The voice actor for Adam Jenson, Elias Toufexis, is married to the voice actor for Megan Reed, Michelle Boback.
    • Goofs
      An email in the Picus Station in Montreal is supposedly written by Nicolette DuClare. This cannot be however, as Nicolette had not been born according to the Deus Ex Timeline. This was most likely meant to be her mother Beth.
    • Quotes

      Adam Jensen: Sarif was right about one thing. It's in our Nature to want to rise above our limits. Think about it. We were cold, so we harnessed fire. We were weak, so we invented tools. Every time we met an obstacle, we used creativity and ingenuity to overcome it. The cycle is inevitable... but will the outcome always be good? I guess that will depend on how we approach it. These past few months, I was challenged many times, but more often then not, didn't I try to keep morality in mind, knowing that my actions didn't have to harm others? Time and time again, didn't I resist the urge to abuse power and resources, simply to achieve my goals more swiftly? In the past, we've had to compensate for weakness, finding quick solutions that only benefit a few. But what if we never need to feel weak or morally conflicted again? What if the path Sarif wants us to take enables us to hold on to higher values with more stability? One thing is obvious. For the first time in history, we have a chance to steal fire from the gods. To turn away from it now - to stop pursuing a future in which technology and biology combine, leading to the promise of a Singularity - would mean to deny the very essence of who we are. No doubt the road to get there will be bumpy, hurting some people on the way. But won't achieving the dream be worth it? We can become the gods we've always been striving to be. We might as well get good at it.

      [Sarif Ending - Pro Augmentation]

    • Connections
      Featured in Sage Reviews: Deus Ex: Human Revolution (2011)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • August 23, 2011 (United States)
    • Countries of origin
      • Canada
      • United Kingdom
    • Official site
      • Official site
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Deus Ex 3
    • Filming locations
      • Montréal, Québec, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Eidos Interactive
      • Eidos Montreal
      • Goldtooth Creative
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Color
      • Color

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