Mirrors Edge Catalyst Apr 2026

This is where Catalyst stumbles hardest. The original game had a lean, paranoid thriller plot. Catalyst tries to reboot the universe into a young adult dystopia. We meet a younger, angrier Faith (now voiced by Faye Kingslee, replacing the iconic Jules de Jongh). She gets out of prison. She reunites with her old crew. She fights the evil corporation.

But the original was a game of two halves: a transcendent movement system trapped inside a series of frustrating trial-and-error corridors. Mirrors Edge Catalyst

And yet, for a certain type of player, Catalyst is essential. This is where Catalyst stumbles hardest

You can run from the lowest slums to the billionaire’s penthouses without ever touching the ground. That is the game’s greatest miracle. If you only play Catalyst for an hour, you will likely be frustrated. The combat is floaty, the story is forgettable, and Faith trips over curbs with alarming frequency. We meet a younger, angrier Faith (now voiced

Unlike the original’s washed-out, hazy look, Catalyst bursts with color. Red pipes guide your path like arteries. Yellow scaffolding begs to be wall-run. Purple mag-rope rails let you slide across chasms at breakneck speed. This is a world designed as a continuous jungle gym. There are no "levels" here—just one massive, seamless sandbox.

Just run. Don’t stop.