– General excitement for a more traditional, grounded war experience with large-scale battles and DMZ returns, but lingering skepticism about how it will actually perform in gameplay and live-service elements.
– Promised improvements (reworked gunplay, better visibility, DLSS 4.5, ray tracing, Big War battles) generate interest, yet fans demand real gameplay previews before buying and distrust flashy trailers.
– Concerns about monetization and live-service features (microtransactions, BlackCell/ Vault Edition, operator bundles) potentially undermining the serious military tone and campaign.
For starters, word on the street is that Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 is on the way, with Black Ops 7 as the current PS5 option priced around $35 on Amazon. We’ve already covered the particularities in other reports. Here, we examine how the reveal has sat with the community so far. In short: it’s generally seen in a good light, yet Reddit carries a strong undercurrent of skepticism among fans.
Different tone and focus mix
In a departure from typical threats, this time the narrative centers on a wide scale invasion by North Korea, mixed with trench warfare, urban combat, and a Price arc weaving through the shadows. The plain reading suggests a classic war experience more in line with older entries, which seems to land better with some players. The return of DMZ is also drawing positive reactions, and for some, the extraction mode might even outpace the campaign or multiplayer in excitement.
Promises vs reality whispers
Activision touts reworked gunplay, clearer visibility, absence of bloom, fresh maps, colossal War-scale battles, and a PC-first approach featuring DLSS 4.5, ray tracing, and frame generation. Yet fans aren’t buying big promises at face value anymore. In the Reddit thread for the reveal trailer, the vibe is: “Looks good, but CoD trailers have always looked good.” The mood skews toward waiting for gameplay previews and reviews prior to buying, with pre-orders seeming less compelling to many players.
What the community fears and hopes
The teased content of Call of Duty: Modern Warfare 4 feels like it could truly resonate with fans if the promises are kept and the live-service pitfalls are avoided after launch. The loudest worry right now is that the serious military tone might be undercut by flashy crossover skins after only a few seasons. Skepticism also centers on monetization and pre-order schemes, with BlackCell, operator bundles, the Vault Edition, and possible microtransactions repeatedly criticized in discussions. Many worry that the game could start with a grounded, gritty campaign and gunplay, only to morph into a big storefront with a shooter bolted on.


