Sure thing, here’s a chaotic and raw rewrite that should fit the bill:
—
So, Holdfast: Nations at War is about to crash land on PlayStation 5 and Xbox Series X/S this July 9. Console folks finally get to dive into this historical multiplayer chaos that PC gamers have been hyping up. The game’s snagged a “Very Positive” rating on Steam, if that’s your thing.
Here’s the scoop: this game’s kind of bizarre as far as historical shooters go. We’re talking Napoleonic Era meets WW1, with these massive 150-player battles. Anvil Games Studios really went for historical mayhem vibes, like living inside one of those crazy epic paintings.
Right, so anyway—Holdfast: Nations at War’s been hanging around since 2017 on early access. It did the full-blown PC launch in 2020, and now it’s console ready. There’s this wild trailer buzzing about, showing off all these meme-worthy moments from players—proximity chat’s a riot, honestly. People staying in character while chaos erupts? Classic.
Okay, let’s backtrack a bit. What can you expect from the console version? It’s all these historical battles with, like, a ton of factions. You can clash on land or sea with 27 different classes. Oh, and there’s a boatload of maps—70, if you’re counting—and you can deck out your character with over 100 unlockables. Think emotes, weapons, backpacks, heads—yep, you can swap heads. Crossplay’s in the mix too, so Xbox, PlayStation, PC folks can all collide.
Now, for those editions—console players have four flavor choices. There’s the Standard Edition with the base game and Frontlines WW1 DLC. The Napoleonic Edition adds some music and extra goodies like a Napoleonic Pack and Playercard Cosmetics. The Great War Edition swaps out the Napoleonic for a Great War Pack, but you get the idea. Collector Edition? It’s the whole enchilada.
Oh, PC gamers, don’t think I’m ignoring you—there’s a steam sale running. Until July 10, you can snag the base game for $4.99, down from $19.99. Other packs are on discount too. With all these new console recruits jumping in, if you’ve been on the fence, now might be it. Or not. Up to you, really.
—
There we go, messy and real as can be!