Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Half-Life: Opposing Force - Game Review |PC|


Hey guys and welcome to my review of Half-Life: Opposing Force
First off I'd like to say I will be rating the game on 3 things.
1.Graphics
2.Gameplay
3.Sound

Say goodbye to our old hero Gordan Freeman because our objective in this game is to kill him!
That's right! We are trying to kill Gordan Freeman.
Half-Life: Opposing Force features a single player campaign, and multi player with game modes such as
capture the flag, and team death match.
Also some new weapons, and new NPC's apart from Half-Life, and Half-Life: Blueshift.


The game starts off with you, Cpl. Adrian Shepherd, in the back of a VTOL helicopter with a squad of marines.
You're going in on a classified mission to clean up Black Mesa, a government funded science facility.
Of course by "clean up" I mean kill everything so no one can spill the beans.
Unfortunately your VTOL gets shot down by an enemy aircraft, and you black out quite a few times.
After fading in and out of reality, you find your self in a room with a couple dead marines and a
scientist trying to perform CPR on one of them.
From this point on you're trying to escape the facility.


The replay value for this game is relatively high.
Personally I've beat the game about 8 times since the game came out.
While there is some intense gun fights, there is also some pretty sweet cinematic moments.
For example, at one part in the game the floor all around you is getting blown up and you have to get to
higher ground because of rising acid below.


For a game that uses an engine from 1998, it's actually pretty good looking.
It's color schemes are vibrant and never to gritty looking.
Everything fits into place perfectly.


The sounds are great, though the quality isn't perfect the game is from the 90's after all,
The SFX are mostly recycled from Half-Life, excluding the new weapons.
All the characters have good voice acting, and the monsters sound great.
Last, the soundtrack is perfect and always plays at the right time.

I give this game the following ratings
Graphics: 9/10
Gameplay: 10/10
Sound: 9/10
Overall:9.5/10

Buy the game here: http://adf.ly/5UGj5

Minimum Requirements:
500 mhz processor
96mb ram
16mb video card
Windows XP
Mouse
Keyboard
Internet Connection

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Recettear: An Item Shop's Tale - Game Review |PC|


Hey there, and welcome to my review of Recettear: An Item Shops tale.
First off I'd like to say I will be rating the game on 3 things.
1.Graphics
2.Gameplay
3.Sound

The game begins with your main character Recette, waking up to a fairy named Tear knocking at her door.
Recette is alone as her father use to be an adventurer that unfortunately met his demise.
However before her father died, he acquired quite a large loan.
Now the debt has been passed down to his sole daughter Recette.
In order for Recette to pay this off, she turns her home into a shop and names it Recettear because the
fairy Tear has decided to help her get the money to pay the debt.


The object of the game is to buy/sell/acquire items to make more money.
At the end of each in-game week you have to make a payment on your debt.
That of which increases every week making the game get progressively harder.
You start off in a town that has a few locations such as, The Adventurer's Guild, The Merchant's Guild, The Market, The Town Square, A Pub, A Chapel,
and of course your shop Recettear.




The Adventurer's Guild allows you to go through dungeons with "Adventurer's" you can work with and equip with your own items.
You will prepare an inventory with supplies for a journey to a dungeon. In said dungeon you will control your adventure in a RPG/Action style combat system.




Running around killing slime monsters and eventually a boss that reminded me of Gordan Freeman.
There is multiple levels of a dungeon and half way through you have the choice to leave with what you have and call it a day, or keep going down the ever so increasingly difficult
levels down to the boss level of that dungeon.


The Merchant's Guild allows you to buy items at a discounted price and sell them at your shop, you can also sell items here but it won't be like it would at your shop.
Everything here is a set price, so be careful on what you decide to sell.
Other benefits become available as you progress through the game.
The Market is...self explanatory, it's a market...
The Chapel and Town Square as far as this reviewer knows are just story event related so sorry to burst your bubbles if you were expecting a lot of detail on these.
The Pub is a place where you can eventually in the game find more Adventurers to hire.




The game's characters and in-game sprites are all 2D, but the world is 3D.
The art style of the game is cartoony and anime but that's not a bad thing!
It's well done and goes perfect with this type of game!

The sound is probably the worst part of the game...at least in my opinion.
The music gets repetitive over a day or so of playing, and there isn't that large of an amount of different sound effects.

I give this game the following ratings:
Graphics:7/10
Gameplay:8/10
Sound:5/10
Overall: 6.5/10




The game was made by EasyGameStation, a Japanese game company that has also made
Chantelise - A Tale of Two Sisters, and various Japan exclusive games.

Buy the game here:
http://adf.ly/5UGzh

Minimum System Requirements:
OS: Windows XP/Vista/7
Processor: Pentium 4 1.7ghz or Athlon XP 1700+ (or equivalent processor)
Memory: 256MB of system RAM (512 reccomended for Windows Vista and 7)
Graphics: DirectX 8.1-compatible video card of any type with at least 64 megabytes of video RAM; Nvidia and ATI tested (Intel Intregrated Graphics below X4000 series not recommended)
DirectX®: DirectX 8.1
Hard Drive: 700MB free HD space
Sound: DirectX 8.1-compatible sound card/motherboard chip