Warzone is a free-to-play Call of Duty: Modern Warfare spin-off. It's a separate title from the main game, which means you don't have to buy Modern Warfare to play it, and when you download the game you can play it as much as you want with the potential for a future. battle pass. Granted, if you don't have the base game, Warzone offers a large download, but that won't destroy your setup. Plus, you can play with your friends from a variety of different platforms.
When you enter battle royale mode, the game has a brand new feature called the Gulag. You enter the Gulag after your death in the battle royale game. Every dead player is sent here as a prisoner of war. They must wait their turn until they are chosen to fight another player in the game in a one-on-one combat. The winner of the fight has the option to return to the battle royale game before it ends. The loser, however, comes back to the Warzone to lobby to seek out a new game to join if they don't have teammates to respawn them.
The concept is extremely interesting, especially considering how other games deal with respawns. Apex Legends and Fortnite both feature spawn points for team members to bring their friends back from the dead if they can reach them. In Warzone, the player who is knocked out has to work his way through the game, and this could be a fun way to motivate players to stay in a match, even if they die immediately at the start of a match.
The Gulag is not the only method of bringing a player back into the game. If a teammate breaks down and fails in their attempt to win against their opponent in the Gulag, the team can use the money they he won during the match to ask him to come back in the match. Teams earn this money by entering into contracts during the match.
Warzone offers a unique approach to death, making it easier for players to return to madness rather than finding themselves waiting in a lobby to find a decent pair of teammates to work with them. We can expect more creative Warzone mechanics after launch.