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The most underrated Deus Ex game is criminally cheap on Steam, even though you all deserve to pay more after being so mean about it

Sometimes, in our arrogance, in our ignorance, by some ugly quirk of fate, we reject the gifts we are given. We cast down beauty and topple perfection. We spit on art and forget that what is popular is not always right, and what is right is not always popular. You know, like when everyone pretended that Deus Ex: Invisible War wasn't an absolute, bona fide banger.

Some of you owe Harvey Smith a written apology, is all I'm saying.

So it's with mixed emotions that I bring news that Invisible War is currently going for couch-cushion money. That is to say you can pick it up for $0.97 (£0.83) during the ongoing Steam FPS Fest (or FPStival, as I'm calling it internally). On the one hand: Great, a fantastic opportunity for more of you to have a come-to-JC moment when you fire the game up and realise that I was right all along. On the other: Do the doubters deserve this price after what they put the game through? Does Invisible War?

I say no. If anything, we should be jacking the price up. It should be a game that increases in price once a quarter in direct proportion to the indignity its reputation has been subject to. Deus Ex: Invisible War should, by all rights, cost about $200 by now.

You might think I'm joking (always a mistake), but I really do love the second Deus Ex game. When I got my hands on its Xbox version as a wide-eyed 10 year old back in 2003 it blew my mind. The choice and adaptability astounded me. I still remember spending ages just figuring out all the myriad ways I could pull off an Upper Seattle sidequest that saw you assassinate some schmuck in his hotel room, for instance.

It had its flaws, yes, and it wasn't as good as its predecessor. Its levels were annoyingly delimited by console hardware, and I'm not entirely clear what Ion Storm was going for with the universal ammo stuff, but overall? It's still a great, flexible immersive sim that the devs managed, miraculously, to cram onto an original Xbox.

Which, to be frank, might still technically be the

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