As is the case with all nuclear accidents, animals have mutated into evolved monsters, and human kind is at serious risk of becoming extinct. Metro 2033 is a first person shooter that takes place in post-apocalyptic Moscow (my bad), and their subway is the backdrop for this urban tale. Metro-2 was (supposedly) secretly built by Stalin and the KGB, and there are no official confirmations of its existence. Moscow is famous for their underground subway system (AKA Metro), and is infamous for their purported secret track called Metro-2. The thing video games have going for them is they give you the opportunity to explore new territories or places you would never think of going. So let’s get on with it, shall we? My Vadka is getting warm! Yes, I know this game is getting on in age, but it’s a great test for DirectX 11 capability and 3D visual flexibility on all three stereoscopic 3D driver solutions. In the continued spirit of comrade conundrums, allow me to introduce you to Metro 2033. I’m three quarters Russian, so I think I can get away with asking this question: why are my Russian brethren always the ones responsible for some nasty nuclear disaster or some whacky environmental mistake? Sure, we’ve had the occasional Chernobyl and K-19, but who hasn’t?!?