Mafia II takes you to an era when criminals had real class...and a seemingly unending supply of bullets. This mob-saga sequel flashes back to the late 1940s to early 1950s underworld, where there were three must-have criminal accessories: an overcoat, a fedora, and a Tommy Gun. Looking for a way out, Vito, the son of a poor Italian immigrant, is tempted by organized crime and its shortcut to the American Dream. He and his childhood buddy Joe team up to try and become part of the Family. With a cinematic storyline, environments that load seamlessly, and a throwback, licensed soundtrack, Mafia II unfolds like a classic Hollywood gangster movie.
Great story, but really nothing else. If your looking for a fun 10 or so hours through a good story you should check it out. but don't expect to find much to do in the open world. What this game does best is make you feel like your a 40's-50's era mobster, and it is VERY detailed, weather it's the bottles breaking all around you when your in a gunfight, or how your car gets dirty after driving it for a while, or how you have to manualy open every door, the game feels very authentic. The music is sweet when you get to the birth of rock 'n roll, and the voice acting is top notch. If you love movies like Goodfellas you should play this game. The major downside is there is really no replay value whatsoever and there is NOTHING to do other than the missions . The gunplay is fun but the enemy A.I is not great by any means. This is a great game to rent, but deffently don't buy.
Hey looking for a honest review from a gamer who play a game to the end then tells about its best qualities then you've came to the right place.
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Thursday, February 3, 2011
Wednesday, February 2, 2011
Red Dead goes Undead in this new adventure that unleashes zombies on the Wild West. Red Dead Redemption followed former outlaw John Marston across the frontier, where he chose to travel an honorable - or reckless - path. This time, there's no morality to worry about, and no weighty choices to be made - it's all about survival. When an undead plague ravages the West, it's up to Marston to find a cure for the disease and deal with the pesky zombie problem it creates. Battle zombies Wild West style, using frontier weapons and tactics in a genre mash-up that will have you wondering why someone didn't think of this sooner.
Red Dead Redemption is, arguably, one of the greatest games I've ever played and I thank Rockstar for releasing such an awesome game; if you played this expansion, you probably played the game so I can spare the drool fest.Undead Nightmare opens with a wonderfully macabre spin on the original game's events and the story sets off. You'll run into familiar characters from the original game showing their same old charm; essentially, it's another couple of missions added on and that's just fine with me. As the game continues, the dialog gets a little hackneyed but you stick with it and what luck, the end of the storyline seems to be have reached with a little bit of mystery about Marston, a little bit of creepiness and then the payoff is null. No arguments about it making sense or adding up, the only issue is the build-up to what could have been really cool was nothing; it wasn't even lame, it was absolutely nothing. Maybe that's life.
I enjoyed the spooked out score but was a little turn off when I was forced to listen to a Halloweeny-Surf-Rock track. It was tolerable during the town cleansings as it
threw back to bad zombie movies and just felt nostalgically good. This Surf Rock abomination was probably meant to feel like an epic 'ride off to battle for the third act' but I simply wasn't feeling it; I worry the Rockstars of San Diego may have muddled with the music to include their skateboard lifestyle.
Red Dead Redemption: Undead Nightmare delivers a game as solid and as well-done as the original; as an expansion, it excels. What it also has is originality; there are westerns and there are zombie games but who thought throwing them together would be such a rich and fulfilling experience? It's shortcomings, though bothersome, are few and do not spoil the experience overall; fans of the awesome game will likely enjoy this expansion.
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