Sunday, August 30, 2009

PlayStation 2 Games For Sale




Heatseeker
More Info Here

Heatseeker is an arcade-style flying game from IR Gurus, the same developer behind 2005's Heroes of the Pacific. Unlike Heroes, Heatseeker takes place in modern times and places you in the cockpit of some of today's most well-known fighter jets.

It's not a very deep game; it's kind of ugly, and the v oice acting is atrocious. But Heatseeker can be fun in small doses--especially if you don't mind taking down wave after wave of enemies, level after level.
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Burnout Revenge
More Info Here

Last year's Burnout 3: Takedown was when the series truly came into its own by achieving a near-perfect balance between high-speed racing and nefarious racing tactics designed to put the other racers out of commission.

With a name like Burnout Revenge, you might expect the latest game in the series to be a little rougher, a little meaner. And you'd be right. While it isn't a total reinvention, Burnout Revenge makes significant alterations to the Burnout form ula that essentially render every other game in the series obsolete.
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X-Men Origins: Wolverine
More Info Here

X-Men Origins: Wolverine is one of a good movie adaptation-game. But, it also has many 'minus point'.

The gameplay is good. We control Wolverine (Logan) with all of his skills. Adamantium Claws (for Melee Combats, of course), Feral Senses (to detec t enemy paths or detect interact-able objects), Healing Factor, Jumping, Lunge Attacks, etc.

Then in some parts, we must use our 'Feral Senses'. We use this to detect an enemy's path, locate an invisible enemy, or to sense the destroy-able or interact-able objects, to open our way. We can also use the Lunge skill to travel to a distance part. In some parts, we must also do button prompts -- most of them are to finish bosses.

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The Sims 2 featured a genetics system that let you create long family trees with aliens from outer space, many new objects to collect, expanded house- and lot-building options, more-focused "aspiration" gameplay, and most importantly, better-developed artificial intelligence, leading to even more of the series' well-known and surprising character behavior.

The Sims 2 for consoles has only some of these features, and it attempts to swap in a marginally interesting new cooking recipe system in exchange for the fascinating, advanced AI of its PC cousin. What's left is a game that's long on collecting and unlocking objects and short on truly compelling gameplay.

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Note: This game does not come with hardware

Rock Band was a revelation for rhythm game fans everywhere. By taking the concept laid down by Guitar Hero then multiplying it by a factor of drums and vocals, developer Harmonix essentially set the bar for multiplayer rhythm gaming.

Now, Rock Band comes to the PlayStation 2, albeit without quite the wow factor of the previous iterations. The PS2 game includes the same collection of hardware as the last release, as well as the same core gameplay design. However, several key modes are missing--modes that made a big difference in the previous releases and are greatly missed in this one. By all accounts, Rock Band is still a lot of fun on the PS2--it's just nowhere near the ideal version of the experience.


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