echo "test"; ?> |
|
|
| | Fallout 2 |  | From: Interplay Category: Video Games
List Price: $59.95 Buy New: $7.90 You Save: $52.05 (87%)
New (9) Used (1) from $3.00
Avg. Customer Rating: 6 reviews Sales Rank: 2399
Format: Cd-rom, Dvd-rom Platform: Windows Xp ESRB: Adults Only Media: Video Game Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.4 x 5.4 x 0.6
MPN: FALLOUT2 EAN: 5016488113939 ASIN: B000FUHVSE
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
|
| Customer Reviews:
| Showing reviews 1-5 of 6 | | NEXT » |
Fallout Training October 13, 2008 Overall I'm enjoying the game as a introduction to the Fallout series. Those of you waiting for Fallout 3 to come out this game would be the best past-time, and also as a training ground. Allowing the choice of the player to shape the character they use and the way other people react to you. Wethier its being a "Jet" addict or just helping a caravan with some radscorpions. Your choice matters.Oh, and how to get out of travel mode use the mouse to click inside the Triangle.
ITS A MUST-BUY! July 23, 2008 1 out of 2 found this review helpful
this game has alot of stuff mostly good stuff but this game is better then alot of games and makes me and alot of others even now like 8years later i still love it but buy the fallout collection it has this game and fallout [...]
Fallout 2 Forever June 9, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
If you like Fallout games, then you will be instantly addicted. While Fallout 2 is an older era RPG, it exhibits all of those little things that set the standard for RPGs of this genre that the newer games try to duplicate and usually don't. Unlike the original release, this version works well with Pentiums. The fixes are well done, and I've really stressed the parameters in ways the designers probably never anticipated:)
Don't buy for newer computers September 29, 2007 2 out of 11 found this review helpful
I bought this software and played it on a computer with xp pro and cannot get out of travel mode. I tried emulating previous operating systems to no avail. I love the game, just unable to play it and can't find any fixes online.
A Classic and a Must-Have April 25, 2007 9 out of 9 found this review helpful
I played the demo of the first Fallout game years ago off of a demo disk that a friend of mine got in the mail. Suffice it to say that I bought the original Fallout shortly thereafter and became enamoured by even the idea of a sequel. However, unlike poorly written sequels to boxoffice smash hits Fallout 2 delivered with absolutism. Not only were the game's core competencies improved, but the entire scope of the game had been expanded. The developers kept what they had done well in the first game and retooled things that had needed work. It wasn't long before Fallout 2 had taken the highest spot on my video game hierarchy.
The quality of the game though is not entirely recognized the first time through. I throughly enjoyed playing through the game the first time, but I soon realized that on my second and third times through I was still finding a vast number of differences. You see, Fallout is not like a typical game that is wholly linear. There are many different ways to reach the end, and major subplots can be avoided, skipped or completely overlooked on any single time through the game. Different paths or methods or styles can therefore be used to complete the game. I no longer judge a game on how much it challenges me or how difficult it is to finish it. I consider the whole value of the entertainment that I derive from it. Hence, the long-standing value of the game has become its replayability.
I have played many games in my life. Some of them have provided far more intense entertainment than Fallout 2 and others have challenged me more. However, none have come so close as to match the level of long-standing entertainment that I have derived from this single game. Clearly, Fallout 2 was the best video game purchase I have ever made.
|
|
|
Copyright
©
2006 Adminpal LLC | |