Splinter cell pc iso download






















Sounds like someone you might buy insurance from. Still, we have to admit the game does look pretty goddamn amazing. It has all those shadowy bits and gadgety things, and Mandrake. I mean Sam, has a few cool tricks up his sleeve too. Even if he does have a small wiener. It s a strange concept you must admit. Here you are, this elite undercover operative, invincible stealth assassin or whatever, conducting a mission of the utmost danger, and yet you spend your whole time sneaking around out of sight, hiding, waiting for an opening, and generally doing All those years of training in weapons, languages, martial arts, espionage, and here you are just hanging around in the shadows like some sort of froth-lipped, fidgeting pervert trying to steal a glimpse of pink flesh through your neighbour's lace curtains.

And yet, strangely enough, pretending to do next to nothing is some of the best fun you've ever had in front of a computer screen. The atmosphere is palpably intense, the fear of discovery overwhelming; the sense of mastery felt as an enemy wanders past you, completely oblivious to your presence: impossibly satisfying. Thus is the power of invisibility.

And eventually, of course, the moment strikes. The moment when all your training comes to bear, when you spring into action and It's not about just overcoming your opponent; it's about doing it silently, undetected, unseen. Doing it with style. And this is what Ubi Soft's imminent stealth-action blockbuster Splinter Cell is all about. Maximising your options -maximising the number of different, cool ways you can eliminate your foes.

Or disable them. Or avoid them. As Gregoire Gobbi, producer on Splinter Cell, explains: We've designed the game so that in 90 per cent of cases you can choose exactly how to handle things. We build the world, we simulate some rules that are simple and easy to understand, we give you some tools, and then you do whatever you want to reach your objective. It's this kind of freedom, coupled with the fact that the game looks absolutely gorgeous, that's caused actual ripples of excitement whenever Splinter Cell has appeared in public.

This time, however, we've played it, or at least a couple of levels of it, and have tasted some of that freedom first-hand. Of course when we say you can do whatever you want', it doesn't quite mean that hero Sam Fisher can spy on enemies with the old eyeholes in the newspaper' trick, or overcome enemies with a swift Vinnie Jones-style plum squeeze. There's no doubt though that he's a resourceful chap with more than a few tricks up his sleeve.

Gregoire is eager to stress this as we approach the first door in our first level of the game. Before entering a room, you can do several things. You can shoot out the lights outside so you can't be seen in the doorway. You can also use your snake cam, to give a sneak preview of what's going on in the next room.

A grainy fish-eye view of the next room appears: inside, a guard stands restlessly between cells of prisoners, his back to the door.

Gregoire continues: Once you get inside you can do many things. You can just look, trying to understand the pattern of the guards' movements so that you can sneak through the area. You can shoot out all the lights with your silenced weapon, which will make a noise that the guard will investigate, but it will make things easier for you if you get away with it.

Or you can just shoot the guards with your sniper scope, regulating your breath to get a steadier target. At this point, the reticule hovering over the guard's unwary form gets the better of me, and I unload half a clip into his back.

I receive a disapproving glance, but it seems to do the trick. Anyone familiar with the exploits of Solid Snake will recognise the aim-steadying feature mentioned here as an idea cribbed from Metal Gear Solid. But whereas in that game you popped a nice calming Diazepam to aid your sniping, Sam Fisher simply holds his breath. Not as cool perhaps, but certainly more believable.

This is a Tom Clancy game after all, and hence set in a rigorously almost-real, day-after-tomorrow universe. All the gadgets, weapons, technology - even the political situation that frames the plot - either exist today or very easily could within the next five years.

In fact, most of the gadgets can be bought at Spymaster. Whether or not this realism is a good thing or not is probably a matter of taste. In any case.

Grdgoire quickly regains his train of thought. You could also have shocked him with your sticky shocker, putting him out of commission for a couple of hours. Or waited until he wandered away, used your split-jump thing to straddle the corridor and shoot out one of the lights so that he came to investigate. Then once he walked underneath you, you would just have needed to drop down on his head and knock him out. Maybe next time, eh? By this stage it's becoming clear that there are three main ways to tackle any given situation.

You can be stealthy, remaining in the safety of the shadows at all times and avoiding confrontation. Your light meter tells you how visible you are, and if no shadow exists, you simply create one by knocking out the lights when no one's looking.

You can use your gadgetry, such as your sticky shocker and snake cam, overcoming enemies with your superior equipment budget. Or you can use your athletic moves - dive rolling, split-jumping, abseiling and pole-climbing your way past any given threat. Usually, of course, it's a combination of all three. In fact, the only thing you can't do is go in all guns blazing. I tried this a couple of times, and apart from being swamped with guards every time and running out of ammo, I also failed the mission simply by virtue of breaking my orders to keep a low profile.

This seemed like a bit of a cheap way to enforce stealthy behaviour, as the game should make you want to stay hidden for fear of your life rather than your boss, but we're assured this will be properly balanced by release day. All the NPCs have an alert state signifying their state of vigilance, explains Gregoire. Every time a security breach is detected, the alert state in the whole level will go up a notch -permanently, making progress that much harder.

Security breaches don't just mean getting spotted by a surveillance camera either - all dead bodies must be extremely well hidden if they are not to be found and reported. Getting back to the mission at hand, we soon find ourselves at the next threat -a geek in a laboratory with a keyboard round his neck. This time, on Gregoire's advice, I spare his life. If you sneak up behind him and use the action key, you'll get him in a submission hold. Once again I oblige, and Sam grabs the lard-ass round the neck and puts a gun to his head.

Now you can either interrogate him, use him as a human shield or discard him. Soon enough the tubby egghead is lying on the ground, unconscious.

Another mission objective appears on my interface, but by then I am enjoying the spray of glass and shrapnel as I shoot every breakable item in the room, laughing maniacally as I go. Gregoire looks on, frowning. So far I've eliminated only two foes, but if you're talking stealth and style, it doesn't come much better than this. Stuffy academic types are always quick to tell us that videogames are about exercising power.

Well, if shooting a bunch of witless, scuttling Nazis in the head with a machine gun gives you a kick, how much more satisfying is it going to be to lure your opponent into a shadowy trap, put him in a submission hold and pump him for information, only to pistolwhip him and dump his lifeless body in the nearest stairwell? It's going to be brilliant, of course. In the meantime. I'm getting impatient, and I push Gregoire about some other aspects of the game. What about the ends of levels - are there bosses to contend with?

No we don't have boss characters," clarifies Gregoire. To pace the game, we have special sequences, using special gadgetry such as a laser mic that you have to use to intercept a conversation. The gameplay involves keeping a target centred on the windows of a moving car, or a lift. In another one, you have to enter a locked security door.

To do this, you fire a sticky camera onto a wall near the door, then hide while a guard comes and taps in the code. You have to switch to heat vision in order to see what keys he touched, by watching the residual heat signature on the buttons, to retrieve the combination and open the door. Well, that certainly shut me up. Bosses seem like a silly idea now. I could go on and on about all sorts of other cool aspects of Splinter Cell, even though I only played through a handful of levels before outstaying my welcome.

And I haven't even mentioned the plot yet terrorist cells, information warfare, yadda yadda. However, the game is just weeks away from completion, and chances are I'll be reviewing it for you next issue, so I'd better not shoot my load prematurely. Needless to say, it's looking superb, and it'll be a calamity if it proves to be anything less than the landmark of stealth gaming it appears to be. For this reason, we've made sure that we'll be the first ones to see it and review it when it's finished and we'll be bringing you the world exclusive review very soon.

What's more, readers will be the first ones to play it well, apart from us when the exclusive playable demo arrives on our cover discs. Because we care. Gone are the days of vision cones, arbitrary dark zones and myopic guards -Splinter Cell's lighting system makes hiding in the shadows about as real as it gets. With one single source of light we can illuminate a whole scene, and everything casts a shadow on everything.

The light shines through the fence and casts a shadow on Sam, who casts a shadow on himself. This gives a very realistic look to the game, and it's also consistent with the kind of gameplay we have in the game, because it's all about playing with light. One of the small revolutions going on in games at the moment is the addition of advanced real-world physics', which calculates the movement and interaction of objects and characters in real time such as a bullet and a crate, or a corpse and a flight of stairs.

It's set to become standard issue in shooters over the next couple of years, but at the moment it's all a bit new and exciting. Every platform appreciates this game because of the nice gameplay. In the commercial market, around 1. Overall this is really a very nice game for your gaming console and you should play it. A: The Xbox and Xbox , region-locked consoles. Although it was up to the publisher if a game is region-free or not.

A number of games are region-free and will play on a unit from any region. But OFW users need to follow the installation instructions as given. A: No, I am not conducting bypass any survey for the files. As you know CrackSoftPC team always provide you best and latest games free. As a player you got missions and in missions, you have to target politicians.

Meanwhile, they are also involved in other terrorist activities. It also comes with new and enhanced weapons and other helping tools. Above all they are really in the deep dark mud. Before you done any work or mission you have to plan it. But On the other hand, they were doing things against the interest of US. CrackSoftPC team provides you this awesome game totally free.

A man rises. You are the main character in the game. In the game, you need to collect maps, weapons, gadgets and moreover the special suits. Finally, one by one he has the missions to remove this group out of maps. It is the best game.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000