Video Games : Burnout Paradise

In association with Amazon.com
  

More Information

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - Need for Speed in a Burnout style
this game is great. the feeling that we miss in the newly released Need for Speed: ProStreet, is available in this game. all the features included are great, it has all the previous features plus new ones.

online multiplayer is fun. you can actually get the achievments while playing online with your friends.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Sweet, sweet, crashing action
Finally, I own this game. After years of exclusive PC gaming, I got my hands on the Burnout series.

Instead of a long pontification, I'll get right to the pros and cons

+Open world can rock - Driving around a giant city is great and searching for hidden passages is a lot of fun
+Showtime is a great diversion when you want to mix things up
+The graphics are phenomenal
+Crash physics are great
+Multiplayer is fun and easy to sign onto

-Open world can suck - Nothing is more frustrating than missing a turn (or not knowing there is one without reading the map or pausing mid-race) and losing a race because of an unexpected turn
-The use of the xbox camera for mugshots is kind of pointless. Not a negative really, but doesn't add anything
-It'd be nice if they mixed up crashes and had some in real-time. It can be distracting and take me out of the game
-NO SPLIT-SCREEN TWO PLAYER??? That's just stupid. The whole point of Burnout is to unlock the cool cars in single player so that your buddies can come over, have a couple drinks and crash each other into smithereens. I learned this after buying the game and was REALLY disappointed.


Other than not having two player, the negatives are really just nit-picky things. This is a great game and one of the first games I bought when I picked up my xbox. I recommend it to all arcade racing junkies and good game lovers. Get it!




Rating: 4 out of 5 stars - EA takes a gamble for once.
Innovation is not one of EA's strong suits, and Criterion has basically built the same game over and over. Paradise, on the other hand, does things a little differently, incorporating a big, open world along the lines of a Grand Theft Auto. While the sandbox elements are light, there are a ton of different races to participate in, and once the taste is acquired, it is a good one.

However, it won't do anything to convert those who don't care much for racing games--Mario Kart doesn't count!--, and it may alienate those expecting more of the same, which is what EA normally tends to deliver.

The on-line play is excellent, smooth, and well-integrated.



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - [Scream of Rage]
I hate this game. I cannot express in words the degree to which I hate this game. If this game were a person, I could run it down with my car and not feel the slightest twinge of ethical concern. I hate it so much it leads me to forget things that I've been trained to know are right and good and simply shout expletives in its general direction for the next few hundred words. Fortunately for this game, I'm not quite that much of a jerk.

Imagine that you took Test Drive: Unlimited and the last decent Burnout title, smashed them together, and then carefully excised everything even remotely fun from the mangled monstrosity that resulted. There, my friend, you have found Burnout Paradise. Everything about Revenge that entertained me enough to keep from snapping the disc in half and tossing it into traffic has been removed from this game, and I can't in good conscience recommend it to anybody.

One thing that I can't fault the game for is its appearance, which is certainly a step up. The game is definitely beautiful. Driving through Paradise City, you get to see a lot of different environments, and every single one springs off the screen and directly into your face like some kind of carnivorous monster. When it comes to useful visuals for the gameplay, however, there's some problems with the level of detail included in the game's environments - specifically, I have a hard time figuring out where the bloody road turns in some locations. This is worst in the downtown areas and best on the outskirts of town, but ANY time I miss my turn because it doesn't look like there's a road there at all, somebody needs to yell at the graphical designer.

The game sound is mostly unremarkable, so let's not. It won't make you physically angry, and I guess that you might like the soundtrack (I personally loathed roughly 80% of the included music, but that's not atypical for me with an EA title), but it's not going to pleasure you sexually or make you reevaluate your life.

My problems with the game all have to do with the gameplay, or, rather, the lack thereof. If you've played Revenge, you might remember fun modes like Traffic Attack or Crash Mode. Those were pretty terrific, right? Well, they're gone. Not only are they gone, but some of the fundamental rules that you would have learned from prior games in the series have been utterly invalidated. The big one is the rules on What Kind of Traffic Causes Crashes. In Revenge, they had a simple rule - if you could see headlights or it was a truck, you would wreck into it. Otherwise, you knock it to the side. I don't know what they replaced that with, but I DO know that in the first hour I played, I wrecked against no fewer than ten cars stopped at intersections, smaller than me, facing away from me.

Of greater concern is the bald stupidity that comes from building an open world street racing game in a world that nobody has ever been to. If this game were set in San Marcos, TX, I'd be all over it because I KNOW WHERE THOSE STREETS ARE. I don't know where anything is in this game and the game doesn't do anything at all to help you learn. I'm faced, as a newcomer, with the choice between spending ten hours losing hard just to learn where everything is (not fun) and just plain losing because I don't know where anything is (also not fun). Closed tracks are fun because it's hard to get lost. I got lost in three of my first ten events in this game and ended up on practically the wrong side of town. That's bad.

I could go on for a thousand more words, but I won't belabor my point too heavily. The game has been well received, and maybe it's just me. Maybe people who like "open world" style games will find something to enjoy here. I didn't. I found Test Drive to be a better implementation of the idea. With limited modes that mostly feel identical, no Crash mode (seriously - Crash mode was a puzzle game and that was FUN; Showtime is entirely random), undirected gameplay, poor layout, and any number of other problems, this game would have to come with chocolate cake and my own personal supermodel before I would even consider recommending it. There's a lot of potential for an open world Burnout game, but this isn't the game to realize that dream.



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - Fantastic Graphics and a Lot of Fun
Our family has been having a blast playing this game. Besides the adults, our children (7 and 10) have been using it a lot.

This is a single player video game. The graphics of the city are fantastic. You can see detailed buildings in the distance and as you get closer to them they appear--it is very realistic. It takes a little work to get used to the driving the car in a way that has some semblance of control so my first few attempts were a bit of a complete mess (crashing into things and so on). When you crash it switches to a sideways view as if a bystander was watching it and it goes to slow motion for the crash.

You can drive around wherever you want through the city (a small map is in the corner). When you are ready you can start a street race.

As you play the game more and get driving experience you move up levels that allows you to get a better car.

My boys really enjoy this game.

In case you are wondering about blood or gore, you can't see the drivers in the cars and when you crash there are no bodies, no blood or anything like that.

I can't figure out why this is rated for 10+, I've found nothing offensive in it so far to make me want to stop my 7 year old from playing it.

My kids laugh hysterically when they play this--they like to watch each other play and make comments and laugh as the game progresses.

Video games have sure come a long way from the Atari we had in my teen years--the sound and graphics on this are unbelievable!


More Information
page 4 of  17
 1  2  3  4  5  6  7  8  9  10  11 
 


HOME

Credit Cards - Mortgages - Wester Union - Loans - Loans