- Platform: Macintosh
- ESRB Rating:
Mature - Media: CD-ROM
- Item Quantity: 1
Mature
Product Details
|
Tag this product(What's this?)Think of a tag as a keyword or label you consider is strongly related to this product.
Tags will help all customers organize and find favorite items. |
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars
absolutely brilliant,
By A Customer
This review is from: XIII (Mac) (CD-ROM)
This is a game you could show non gamers and not feel nerdy in the slightest due to the fact that it is a well drawn 50's comic book story in game format, quite extraordinary! The music is good and touches such as close up squares showing the detail of characters demise add to the proffessional quality of this game. It is quite simply the most visually inventive thing to have been made in the history of gaming.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta) Amazon.com:
4.1 out of 5 stars (7 customer reviews) 10 of 11 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
Review for the Alaska Apple Users Group,
By Gerrit H. Dalman "Forged in Fire!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: XIII (Mac) (CD-ROM)
Shooters are a dime a dozen now, but one of UK distributor Feral Interactive's new releases, XIII (Thirteen), stands out from the crowd.This game is based on more than just the story of the comic book by the same name. Rather than using semi-realistic 3D rendering typical in video games, XIII employs a technique called cell shading that uses the real 3D information to block out colored shapes. The result is a visual style that resembles a comic but retains all the capabilities of computer graphics. Every aspect of the game is meant to feel like a living comic book. There's no page turning, but everything from menus to cut scenes is presented in frames. Shoot a foe in the head and see three subsequent frames of the impact flash on your screen. It's more than dressing though. Crouch and cartoony letters spell "tap, tap" - warning you of the guard waiting for you around the corner. Come across an object that is important to the story and it is highlighted in comic-style box. Despite taking up a lot of screen space in some cases, this usually helps you complete your mission. Those missions follow a pretty tight plot. Though corny in detail, it is creative. You play agent XIII, voiced by The X-Files' David Duchovny, who finds himself amnesic and on the run. You spend most of the game fighting through soldiers to find characters from your past and trying to piece together your life through character dialog, stolen documents, and flashbacks. Despite the attention paid to the story, XIII is still a shooter at heart. You often have the option to sneak and snipe or go in guns blazing, but regardless of your technique you'll have plenty of tools at your disposal. The crossbow and throwing knives are a nice addition to the weapons you'd expect and the revolver, which you can speed shoot like Clint Eastwood, is a personal favorite. You can also pick up chairs, ashtrays, and shards of glass to smash or throw at the enemy. Your arsenal is even rounded out with some non-lethals. The grappling hook and lock-pick are essential to navigating most missions and you can even take hostages to cover a retreat. The pop-up needs for these actions make the game pretty interesting the first time around. Once you've finished it, you can adjust the difficulty and try again, but the cheesy voice acting, repetitive kill animations, and looping soundtrack will get old quick. The multiplayer aspect is no help either. Network play is supported via GameRanger (http://www.gameranger.com/) but in a week of trying I couldn't find anyone to play against. That says something. I was able to try out the "bot challenge" which simulates online play and found it slow and uninteresting. Of course that just means the virtues of the game do not translate well into deathmatch. On the up side, the Mac version of XIII contains all the game types from both the PC and console versions, making Mac OS X hands-down the best platform for XIII. As the first of its kind, XIII is a welcome addition to the Mac library. It has some deficiencies though. Audio often skips and the comic book menus can be difficult to navigate on the first try. The mission failure dialog surprisingly lacks a load option so you have to navigate back to the main menu if you don't want to replay the whole level. The games strong point is it's novel appearance. The cinematic effects that represent being stunned or having a flashback look great. The style is surprisingly consistent and you really feel like GI Joe or some other hero in cartoon action that belies the realism of the underlying engine. XIII has reasonable system requirements and a violence setting so it might even be an option for some younger players. It's not a must-have for everyone, but if you're a fan of shooters or are looking for a new kind of eye candy, check this one out. 7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars
So awesome,
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: XIII (Mac) (CD-ROM)
I've played this on my friend's PC, and it is SO much fun. First, while some people call the graphics "old fasioned", or something, they do exactly what they are supposed to do- they make it look like a well done comic book. Half of what makes the game so much fun are its comic book aspects, including "tap, tap, tap" written on the screen when someone is approaching and panels across the top or in the corners showing still-frames at certain points in the game. Also, the game actually does have a storyline, and a pretty good one, making it much more than a simple "shoot anything that moves" game. Finally, the gameplay is a ton of fun because, while it does have a lot of the normal 1st person shooter aspects, also you can do irregular things like knocking people out with ashtrays, chairs, beer bottles, etc. and then carrying these people's bodies to other areas to hide them.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
almost...,
By JM "JM" - Published on Amazon.com
Fun:3.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: XIII (Mac) (CD-ROM)
What a shame. Great story, great art, great scenarios... but the abilty to save this game only at 'checkpoints' is a deadly flaw. It's a visual treat and the narrative is fun, but I got so bored having to kill the same badguys over and over to get through every level that I finally gave up. I don't care who Number I is, or whether anybody saves the world, and I can't imagine anyone who finishes this ever playing it a second time. XIII may be okay for high-speed shooter fanatics, but I found it frustrating beyond words.
|
|