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07-03-2007, 01:35 PM
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#1 (permalink)
| | Banned PSP Mad Hacker
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Florida.
Posts: 565
Firmware Installed: 3.40 OE-A
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Favorite PC game?
Whats your favorite PC game?
Recently I installed "Max Payne"
And I have to say that its amazing.
I have 1 and 2, and Im on Part two of the 1st game.
I admire the people who made that game.
Almost everything you touch is usable.
The coke and snack machine, the sinks,
the water dispensers, the cabinets, the TV's,
the beds. This is the first game Ive seen thats
so realistic. Id have to say my favorite PC game
Ive ever played.
Next is Call of Duty 2 multilayer mode.
Call of Duty 2 online is the best online play Ive had in a good while.
Those are the two games Im playing nonstop lately.
1. Max Payne
2. Call of Duty 2
Whats yours? |
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07-03-2007, 04:22 PM
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#2 (permalink)
| | Super Senior Member PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Sep 2005 Location: Dallas
Posts: 3,837
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Favorite PC game?
All time favorite...
StarCraft
There are lots of great PC games though. |
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07-03-2007, 05:42 PM
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#3 (permalink)
| | Senior Member I Modded My PSP
Join Date: Mar 2007
Posts: 406
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Favorite PC game?
1.Starcraft+Brood War Expansion
2.Defcon
Starcraft was the first PC game I ever played and I still play it to this day.
Defcon has quite the interesting take on Real Time Strategy.
Hl2 and various other games would be up there with those two if I could play them smoothly in cedega...
Last edited by whitelamp : 07-03-2007 at 07:27 PM.
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07-03-2007, 06:29 PM
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#4 (permalink)
| | Senior Member PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Lake Norman, NC
Posts: 1,153
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Favorite PC game?
My favorite PC games ... hmm...
1. GTA San Andreas
2. Unreal Tournament (classic)
3. Unreal
4. Half-Life
5. Half-Life 2
6. Diablo
7. StarCraft / BroodWar
8. Diablo 2
9. Unreal Tournament 2004
10. Unreal 2
11. Transformers (movie AND game, when I get my hands on them  ) Quote:
Originally Posted by Brittany Recently I installed "Max Payne"
And I have to say that its amazing.
I have 1 and 2, and Im on Part two of the 1st game.
I admire the people who made that game.
Almost everything you touch is usable.
The coke and snack machine, the sinks,
the water dispensers, the cabinets, the TV's,
the beds. This is the first game Ive seen thats
so realistic. Id have to say my favorite PC game
Ive ever played. | Sorry... but Max Payne is far from realistic by today's standards. If you want realism, as in realistic locations, as in realistic gameplay, as in you can touch and use everything in the environment, you should try Half-Life 2 - you won't be disappointed.
__________________ Powered by Kubuntu Linux 7.04 - Fear the Penguin. And slowly turning Mac 
Like open source? Read this and take a stand. DarkED Design |
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07-03-2007, 06:31 PM
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#5 (permalink)
| | Senior Member PSP Mad Hacker
Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Pottsville PA
Posts: 889
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Favorite PC game?
Black hawk down. But i had to get some hax codes because people cheat and can fly up in the air and see you behind walla and shit. So fuck it I cheat too..  and i have no problem winning now 
__________________ 
Can you tell me you love me...?
But really mean it...?
Can you tell me you care...?
and sware it on your life...?
Can you tell me you need me...?
Without asking why...?
If theres more to the question,
Theres more to the lie... |
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07-03-2007, 07:26 PM
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#6 (permalink)
| | Senior Member I Modded My PSP
Join Date: Jun 2007 Location: Bryan, TX
Posts: 145
Firmware Installed: 3.71 m33-4
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Favorite PC game?
As a kid my favorite games would've been Starcraft (which I stopped playing because I never was very good outside of single play) and Tribes 2 (which used to be a great online shooter...... now only experts play it anymore, and the recent sequels took out a lot of the fun options you had as far as weapons and packs)
As of right now, I would have to say the best game I've played lately would have to be Half-life 2........ it just blew me away the first time I played through it.... |
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07-03-2007, 08:00 PM
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#7 (permalink)
| | Senior Member PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: USA
Posts: 2,852
Firmware Installed: 3.40e-a
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Favorite PC game?
NBA Live '98
Primal rage
First two games i ever played
you guys like half life so much: PC Games - Half-Life 1 Anthology
on sale |
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07-03-2007, 08:22 PM
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#8 (permalink)
| | Administrator PSP Mad Hacker
Join Date: Apr 2005
Posts: 837
Firmware Installed: 4.01 CFW
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Favorite PC game?
by far Lord of the rings battle for middle earth. I got it on a holiday in america $19.99 a cheap deal as well |
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07-03-2007, 10:46 PM
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#9 (permalink)
| | Banned PSP Mad Hacker
Join Date: Mar 2007 Location: Florida.
Posts: 565
Firmware Installed: 3.40 OE-A
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Favorite PC game?
Quote:
Originally Posted by DarkED Sorry... but Max Payne is far from realistic by today's standards. If you want realism, as in realistic locations, as in realistic gameplay, as in you can touch and use everything in the environment, you should try Half-Life 2 - you won't be disappointed. | I meant it being realistic by being able to use the items placed in the levels.
Nothing more, nothing less.
Its the only game Ive ever played that you could do so.
As for Half life-2,
I will try it.  |
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07-04-2007, 12:29 AM
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#10 (permalink)
| | Super Moderator PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: CT
Posts: 11,970
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Favorite PC game?
HL2 is one of the best FPS games to date. it sucks you in and holds you till the end of the game. highly reccomended and my all time favorite pc game
second favorite is delta force xtreme. its a good remake of the original DF game and very fun
third is WoW since i enjoy wandering around for hours and exploring the massive world
__________________ Semi Inactive and lurking, and kicking xbox 360 over GTA 4 disk read errors on a brand new FUCKING product. god damnit Rockstar
-julie |
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07-04-2007, 12:49 AM
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#11 (permalink)
| | Banned I Modded My PSP
Join Date: May 2006 Location: Neverhood
Posts: 474
Firmware Installed: 69 S3X
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Favorite PC game?
Personally I Like Strategic and Adventure Games, Like WarCraft, StarCraft, CNC Red Alert, Generals, Age of Mythology,Commandos X,CS (i was a WCG Player for CS 1.6 ).
I Love "The Adventure Company" Games ... Welcome to Dreamcatcher Interactive
FPS & Action Games Run better for Consoles ...
__________________ We are Going to HeLL by a Road Called Life ! |
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07-04-2007, 02:55 AM
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#12 (permalink)
| | Senior Member PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Fresno, Ca (USA)
Posts: 1,225
Firmware Installed: Sold my PSP =[
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Favorite PC game?
I've been playing Counter-Strike/Half-Life for the past 6 or 7 years... I'm still not bored of it... 1.6 all the way
__________________ *10k Gamerpoints Achieved 8/16/08* |
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07-04-2007, 05:05 AM
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#13 (permalink)
| | Super Moderator PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Westchester, NY
Posts: 3,823
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Favorite PC game?
Age of empires it is for me...
Otherwise, Im getting a new computer soon, I just need to get a new car first, which is more important, then Ill test out new games...
DarkeD, have you played the transformers game? Is it as good as i am expecting? (High hopes)
I might get it for ps2, since I cant rent it anywhere around here, since its not available |
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07-04-2007, 05:36 AM
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#14 (permalink)
| | Senior Member PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Dec 2006 Location: Lake Norman, NC
Posts: 1,153
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Favorite PC game?
Quote:
Originally Posted by justinisloco DarkeD, have you played the transformers game? Is it as good as i am expecting? (High hopes)
I might get it for ps2, since I cant rent it anywhere around here, since its not available | Nope, not yet. But my friends have been playing it and they told me that it's as good as the movie, so that automatically makes it = w1n.
__________________ Powered by Kubuntu Linux 7.04 - Fear the Penguin. And slowly turning Mac 
Like open source? Read this and take a stand. DarkED Design |
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07-04-2007, 06:03 AM
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#15 (permalink)
| | Senior Member PSP Elite Hacker
Join Date: Jan 2007 Location: USA
Posts: 2,852
Firmware Installed: 3.40e-a
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Favorite PC game?
I've played it for PSP and let me tell you...it is terrible...however i have not experienced the 360 , PS3, Wii versions: 6.0/10
The Good
* Highly detailed Transformer models
* Environments break apart and blow up real good
* Solid voice acting.
The Bad
* Robot-on-robot combat becomes repetitive and dull after a short while
* Camera causes more problems than it fixes
* Both campaigns combined still make for a short game
* Side missions aren't worth doing.
Game Details | About Our Rating System
Transformers: The Game is very much the archetypal movie-licensed game. It's got all the hallmark problems of the genre, including short length, overly simplistic mechanics, a barely-there story, and a bit of a sloppy feel. It is simply an excuse for fans of the upcoming live action film (and maybe even some fans of the old cartoons who, admittedly, will take pretty much anything they can get at this point) to run around, awkwardly beating up Autobots or Decepticons in various semidestructible environments. If that's all you want out of the game, then Transformers might provide you a few mild hours of entertainment. If you were hoping for something more, Transformers will probably just disappoint you.
The basic premise of the game is the same as the film's. The classic Transformers battle between good robots and evil robots has spilled over to planet Earth as the two warring sides search frantically for an artifact known as the AllSpark. The AllSpark is essentially the life force for all Transformers, which explains why they'd want to get it back. Sam Witwicky (voiced with appropriate "gee whiz!"-ness by Shia LaBeouf) is an average teenager who happens to hold the key to finding the AllSpark. From there, it's a race for both sides to find Sam and get the AllSpark. There might be more to the movie's plot than what is presented here, and you should really hope there is, because otherwise, we're all in for one exceedingly boring film. With the exception of a few bouts of basic dialogue between Sam and the various Transformers (including veteran TV series voice actors Peter Cullen and Frank Welker reprising their roles as Optimus Prime and Megatron with about as much enthusiasm as you could hope for), there's almost no story to drive the game forward. In some respects that's not surprising, simply because with this method, almost none of the film is spoiled for you.
Gigantic robots smashing up a city should be more fun than this.
The one potentially interesting thing about Transformers is that it splits the game into two campaigns, with one for each faction. In the Autobots campaign, you'll play as Optimus Prime, Bumblebee, Jazz, and others as you hunt for the AllSpark and try to protect Sam, and the rest of humanity, for that matter. On the flipside, the Decepticons campaign has you playing as Megatron, Starscream, Barricade, and company to track down the AllSpark and destroy the Autobots. While the opportunity to play as both the good and evil sides sounds enticing, you'll actually find that there's very little difference between the two campaigns.
Regardless of which side you pick, you'll be forced to slog through a copious number of missions that have you fighting easy-to-kill grunt Transformers using the same three-hit combo again and again, or racing around one of the game's few, somewhat open-ended environments trying to chase down one Autobot or Decepticon to fight a few times while using the same three-hit combo, as well as an occasional throw attack. These missions might have been more tolerable if the combat were a little more involved, but as it stands, you just need to mash on the melee attack button to blow through most enemies, and the few that aren't so easy just require a random object from the environment thrown at them to soften them up. As you are Transformers, you can also transform and roll out as one of several different vehicle types. However, driving is decidedly less fun than running around as a robot, as the cars handle very loosely and tend to get hung up on random environmental objects--which is odd, since when you hit other cars, they just go flying like they're made out of cardboard.
The lone bright spot comes from the Decepticons campaign. In certain missions, you're tasked with simply laying waste to one environment or another. Be it a big city or a sprawling military installation, these environments are fun to destroy. Your weapons fire does a lot of damage to buildings, cars, trees, and any other solid objects nearby. In the Autobots campaign, you can do the same types of damage, but it's all incidental, since you're ultimately trying to protect humanity--not lay waste to it. On the Decepticons side, your goal is to cause as much chaos as you can, and that can be a good bit of fun. What's neat is the way the destruction and battles are presented--explosions are frequent and large, the damage to buildings looks appropriately massive, and the combat moves you can pull off actually do look cool. Seeing Optimus running around, double-fisting pistols, and Blackout using his helicopter blades as a sword is pretty awesome. Part of that comes from some solid animation, but it also helps that the Transformer models are so highly detailed. Say what you want about the new robot designs from the movie--they're represented very well within the game, though the one issue is that sometimes you'll actually forget which Transformer you're playing as, since many of them look the same in robot form. That's really more the fault of the film's designs than anything else, though.
Adding to the mass-destruction effect is the camera, which violently shakes during battles, and even jerks around a bit as your big, clunky robots run around. Unfortunately, that shaky-cam effect tends to get in the way more than it helps. At times there are so many explosions and so much gunfire going off that the added chaos of the camera makes the whole scene indecipherable for several seconds. This is also one of those games where you can easily get boxed in by multiple enemies or trapped in some chunk of the environment, unable to move because the camera won't steer around to a good vantage point. By the same token, Transformers relies too heavily on contrived "action zones," which are just chunks of the open-world environments that you can't exit while in battle. If you go out, you've got to run back in or you fail the mission. Of course, it doesn't help when you're getting blasted out of the zone and are continually forced out again and again by enemies who follow you out and keep knocking away at you. That isn't a constant problem, but a few missions are made far too frustrating by the fact that you have to constantly try to stay within these stupid action zones.
At least you won't have to put up with issues like this for very long. Each of the game's campaigns is only a few hours in length, putting the game's total length right around five to six hours. If you're really looking to extend out the experience, there are a bunch of side missions in each game area (most of which are just simple, slightly dull "kill a bunch of this enemy type" missions), some unlockable content to mess with, including film clips and photo sets, and some unlockable skins for the Transformers that give them their original, G1 skins from the cartoon. Granted, you'll have to go do all the silly side missions to unlock a lot of those skins, and those just aren't fun enough to justify the effort.
You get gigantic blasters, but you almost never have to use them. That's pretty dumb.
There are some notable differences among the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, and Wii versions of Transformers. The Xbox 360 version has the usual smattering of achievements, many of which can be easily earned just playing through both campaigns, though several of the remaining ones require you to do all the various side missions. In terms of control, the 360 and PS3 versions are basically identical, though the PS3 version lets you use the Sixaxis tilt controls to steer Decepticons that can fly, like Megatron and Blackout. The Wii version obviously has its own array of motion controls, though unlike some other, recent movie-licensed titles, they aren't completely half-baked. Yes, you swipe the Wii Remote or the Nunchuk to attack, but these controls actually feel responsive enough that you don't feel like you're constantly struggling to hit something. The one downside is camera control, which is mapped to the remote. It's not unmanageable, but the camera will often move up or down too far if you just happen to hold the remote at a slight angle. In terms of graphics, the 360 and PS3 versions are both entirely comparable to each other, though the PS3 version is a bit lacking in the lighting department, looking overly dark in spots. The Wii version retains the basic look of the other versions, though it's obviously scaled down to fit with the system's hardware. The Transformers still look nicely detailed in the Wii version, but the environments have been scaled back significantly. The frame rate also tends to dip more often on the Wii version, but not to an unplayable degree.
Transformers: The Game ultimately delivers a passable, though entirely unremarkable tie-in to the upcoming film. The one thing it nails is the size and feel of these gigantic robots and their ability to cause massive destruction, but that isn't enough to carry the entire game, especially with the burden of the periodic glitches, camera problems, and overly simplistic combat to carry as well. If all you want is to see some nice-looking robots beat each other and the world silly, then throwing down a rental fee on this game isn't a bad way to go. But regardless of your affinity for the film, the franchise at large, or giant robots in general, Transformers: The Game doesn't have enough going for it to make it worth a purchase.
By Alex Navarro, GameSpot
I trust gamespot...they have never really failed me in rating games |
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