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Recreation:
Computing
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The
XBox gaming platform.
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mission man in Splinter Cell, Sam Fischer gets a different
perspective on his assignment during one of the new releases
for the XBox. |
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Chance
to win
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The
Gamesman has a copy of the Xbox game Splinter Cell to
give away.
Entries should be e-mailed to ADFgamesmen@telstra.com
with the name of the game you would like to win in the subject
line. Only one entry a person please as subsequent entries
will be discarded.
Include your full name and mailing address in the e-mail
or your entry wont be accepted.
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Congratulations
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to our recent winners: Stephen Higgins, Vic, Medal of Honor
Spearhead; SGT Ben Garfath, ACT, 007 Nightfire; and LEUT
Matthew Ryall, HMAS Melbourne, Medieval: Total War.
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XBox
uncovered
While
the XBox still hasnt cornered the market from the PlayStation
2, it has definitely matured since its release and a wide range
of excellent titles are now available.
With the support of Microsoft Australia and the leading game publishers,
The Gamesman will be reviewing new XBox titles as well as PC, PlayStation
2 and Game Boy Advance games throughout the coming year.
In the lead up to Christmas, Microsoft put together a fantastic
package for its XBox game console. The Massive Pack includes the
XBox console, a standard controller, a DVD remote kit and three
games: the award winning HALO first-person shooter, Sega GT2002,
a great console car-racing game, and Jet Set Radio Future, a futuristic
cell-shaded in-line skating game.
All up the Massive Pack should retail for $748 but for a limited
time it is available for $459.
These packs were one of the hot-selling items before Christmas but
there are still a few available in stores such as Harvey Norman
and Electronics Boutique (usually a few dollars cheaper than
the RRP).
In the US, Microsoft has just launched XBox Live, a system of linking
XBox consoles via a broadband connection to play against other users
in much the same way the Internet has been used for online PC gaming.
While a roll-out date for the Australian release is to be confirmed,
250,000 starter kits were sold in the US during the week of its
launch and Europe looks set to join online in March.
The beauty of the XBox over the PlayStation 2 (which is launching
a similar networking system) is the XBox comes installed with all
the hardware needed to get up and running, hard drive, network card
and broadband adapter. The only thing needed is an account and the
cable in the starter kit.
Splinter Cell http://www.splintercell.com
Ubi Soft http://www.ubisoft.com
While HALO was the XBox launch title that everyone drooled over,
Tom Clancys Splinter Cell is the game to show off just
what the console is capable of doing. It is hard not to compare
it with the award-winning PlayStation title Metal Gear Solid
at first glance, but they are quite different games once started.
Surprisingly, Splinter Cell plays very well using the console
controller but it does take a bit of work to coordinate the camera
as well as movement.
The recently released demo for the coming PC version (expected to
be March) shows just how simple the game is to play using the standard
XBox controller. Everything is at a players fingertips, although
remembering some actions does take some time.
The game puts the player in the assault boots of Sam Fischer, an
operative in the newly formed Third Echelon of the NSA intelligence-gathering
departments. Splinter Cell is set this year in the former
Soviet Republic of Georgia and is part of the ongoing fight against
terrorism. Sam Fischer has been sent to locate and report on the
fate of two CIA agents who disappeared and if possible extract them.
Theres only one problem: no-one in power must find out he
was there.
As you could imagine Splinter Cell focuses on stealth, guile
and cunning over the run-and-gun tactics of most first-person shooters.
It makes for a dramatically different playing style and as such
the game incorporates an over-the-shoulder third-person view to
give players a much wider field of view.
Perhaps the best bet of Splinter Cell is the way a player
can control Sam. It is much more than the run, crouch, crawl, jump,
lean and strafe we are used to. While Sam can do all of this he
can also hug walls, peek incrementally, open doors incrementally,
climb poles and some walls, and even grab someone to use as cover
while holding a pistol to their head.
Sams athleticism gives a player many more options in completing
the mission; being able to hide above a roving guard by doing a
Van Damme-style split to suspend yourself between two walls is definitely
new to the gaming world.
Sam is also equipped with a range of gadgets to help on the mission.
A fibre-optic camera comes in handy for seeing what is going on
in the next room, while a tazer is good way of subduing those who
dont need to be killed.
Most important, however, is Sams PDA. For an older guy he
is very computer savvy and Sam can use his PDA to hook into any
system and copy information that may come in handy.
He has an unusual thermal/night vision system that proves very effective,
while his pistol is a specialist infiltration unit with a silencer,
large magazine capacity and excellent targeting.
Splinter Cells environments are also great with lots
of shadows, movement and realistic noises to keep you on your toes.
Most of the environment is interactive and doing things like shooting
fire extinguishers to create a gas cloud to cover a movement are
quite possible. In fact there is definitely no one way to achieve
anything in the game, giving it a lot of replay value to try different
techniques.
However, it is quite hard and most players will find themselves
making full use of the XBoxs hard drive to continually save
the game. It kept me occupied for much of the leave period and I
would rate it as one of my truly enjoyable console-gaming experiences.
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