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Metro 2033

Metro 2033

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From: THQ
Category: Video Games

List Price: $49.99
Buy New: $27.99
as of 7/30/2010 00:31 CDT details
You Save: $22.00 (44%)



New (20) Used (3) from $25.99

Seller: BooksfromMel
Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 27 reviews
Sales Rank: 1584

Format: DVD-ROM
Platforms: Windows Vista, Windows XP
Genre: adventure_games
ESRB: Mature
Media: DVD-ROM
Edition: Standard
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Batteries Included: No
Age: 17 - 20 years
Operating System: Windows Vista
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.2
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.3 x 0.6

MPN: 49401
Model: 49401
UPC: 752919494011
EAN: 0752919494011
ASIN: B002V14VOC

Publication Date: March 9, 2010
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • An RPG-light story where players encounter NPC’s via engaging and trading activities across the various ‘Station States’ of the Underground, each with its own social system.
  • A menacing atmosphere incorporating shadows, ambient sounds, lighting effects and claustrophobic scenes to create feeling of tension and fear.
  • Diversity of combat ranging from brutally intense action from a distance, to melee combat fought with improvised weapons or hand to hand in the half shadows.
  • A morality system based on points and measured by a proprietary engine that takes into account actions like curiosity, kindness and prejudice resistance, leading to alternative story endings.
  • Unique economy and inventory management systems based on ammunition and items which can be used to take down enemies or saved to purchase upgrades or buy goods.

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Metro 2033 PC

Amazon.com Product Description
Metro 2033 is a single player first-person shooter (FPS) that incorporates role-playing game (RPG) elements. Based on the best selling novel of the same name by Dmitry A. Glukhovsky, it tells the story of humanity's struggle for survival in the forgotten tunnels of Moscow's underground subway system following a devastating nuclear war. Features include mission play combining a unique mix of firearm and melee combat, an economy revolving around ammo and items and an experience system which takes each of your actions into account, leading to a variety of possible alternate endings and extended replay value.

Metro 2033 game logo
Story
The apocalypse came by our own making, with a single blinding flash, followed by a firestorm of sheer flame. It took just an hour and a half to wipe out 3.5 billion people and 10,000 years of civilization, plunging humanity into a hopeless Dark Age. In the aftermath, survivors in Moscow moved underground and slowly organized into small socially and politically independent tribes, clustered around the city's deep, subway stations. The young man, Artyom is among them. A member of the first generation of children raised in the subterranean world following the apocalypse, he has only the vaguest recollections of life above ground, and contact with other humans beyond those that inhabit his local station, "Exhibition," but he will have to face new experiences with both if humanity is to survive. Mutated beasts known as "Dark Ones" are spreading throughout the isolated stations of the Metro, and Artyom has been chosen as the messenger to spread the news of the new peril.

Game hero Artyom in full gear and gas mask in Metro 2033
Become humanity’s last savior and uncover the truth behind the horrors that await in Moscow’s underground.
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Gameplay
Metro 2033 is a single player, FPS that also incorporates RPG elements. Action played out in the role of young Artyom, is mission-based and because the game is based on the Glukhovsky novel, the storyline veers away from the anti-Russian stance that is often seen in post-apocalyptic stories and video games. Here the Russian characters are humanity, and fight every day against the terrors that nuclear war has wrought. These terrors come mostly in the form of mutants known as "Homo Novus," who have invaded the Underground, as well as frightening alien-like paranormal creatures that haunt the gameworld. The game hero, Artyom, has a certain immunity to the latter and a talent for dispatching the former, which together make him a very popular choice to be sent on missions. Combat throughout utilizes a mixture of improvised firearms and melee weapons. Balancing the use of these two is important because in this world of violence and scarcity, ammunition plays the duel role of protection and commodity. Throughout the game players will use ammo as much to purchase items and upgrades at different stations visited, as they will use it in combat. In addition, the choices made by players throughout the game register as "Enlightenment Points," or the lack of them. Accumulated totals of these register as a variety of constructs such as curiosity, kindness and prejudice resistance that can and will lead to alternative story endings. Together with its unique inventory management system, engrossing storyline and replay value based on morality, Metro 2033 is sure to be a game not to be missed by FPS and RPG players alike.

Key Game Features

  • Menacing Atmosphere – Incorporating shadows, ambient sounds, lighting effects and claustrophobic scenes to create feeling of tension and fear
    • DX10 and PhysX delivers the best graphical detailing of a post-nuclear setting to date.
    • Visceral engagement with the game world - fall down broken steps, tunnel race etc.
  • Diversity of Combat – Combat is brutal and intense, fought with improvised weapons or hand to hand in the half shadows.
  • Enlightenment Points – Proprietary engine takes into account your actions and analyzes them (curiosity, kindness, prejudice resistance) leading to alternative story endings.
    • Play through the game using either over-the-top shooter, or calculated stealth techniques, altering the game play style in the progression of the game.
  • Time of No Return – The length of being in hostile environment on the surface is limited, players should take that into account when venturing above ground.
  • Inventory Management – Use ammo to take down the opposition or save it to purchase upgrades. Cartridges replace cash, Gadgets are gold (gas masks).
  • RPG Light Story – Encounter NPC’s via engaging and trading activity across the various ‘Station States’, each with its own social system.
Additional Screenshots:
A millitary installation built within a subway stop in Metro 2033
Distinct underground societies.
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Combat in the tunnels of the Moscow underground in Metro 2033
Unique combat blend.
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Using wristwatch to monitor remaining oxygen available through a gas mask in Metro 2033
Loads of gadget options.
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Observing a guitar player entertaining a crowd of survivors in the underground in Metro 2033
FPS & RPG elements blended.
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Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 27



5 out of 5 stars Great Game....   July 26, 2010
Paul G. Atkinson (Fort Myers, FL)
I read a of the reviews and was very skeptical. However, I am happy with the game and highly recommend it.

I go into every game without any pre-conceived notion of what I think they should be. Other reviewers whining about Stalker this... Fallout that... what a crock. Each game should stand on it's own and this one does. Sure it isn't perfect. I have only played a couple I thought were, so it's easy to want to set the bar to high. However, this is an extremely engrossing game. The graphics are awesome. Also, I guess if you are using an old Atari you might have problems running it. I am having no problem playing it on a 3 year old 2.3GHz dual core with 4GB Memory and a GTX280 card. I have the game set a step below the highest settings allowed on at 28" monitor at 1920x1200. The graphics on this are quite simply, very immersive and extremely well done. You really feel like you are in the subways.

Next, the complaints that it is linear are tiresome also. Some people like that style of play. Crysis is probably one of the best games ever made. However, it is very linear. Pesonally, I don't always want a game with a bunch of side missions that add little to the story, if only to make the game longer. Borderlands, Fallout3, Stalker, and games like Oblivion bored me to tears because of this, while others love that style of game. To each their own I say.

Lastly, everyone likes different things. When I was younger I like the games with big inventories, having to sleep to heal, collecting stuff, building levels and so forth. However, as I've gotten older I just want to play a great game. The simple FPS where you arm yourself and go to work kind of games are my choice now. I don't want to spend a week creating my charater and buidling up levels or over thinking what gun... what ammo, take the side quest, save the princess, where am I on the map... I just want to play. F.E.A.R., Crysis, COD4, FarCry, Half-Life, Bioshock to name a few are just like Metro. Your character is determined, your destination is linear, and there aren't lots and lots of choices, but it is engrossing and fun with just the right mix while keeping the game moving.

So, if you are looking for a game that is fun, looks great, and is worth buying... Metro 2033 is a pretty good choice.



3 out of 5 stars Good Effort   July 21, 2010
Corwin James Wagner
The skinny of this game is this: You are a citizen of a new world, a world where the surface world is an inhospitable place due to nuclear war and destruction. What is left is metro tunnels, tunnels of the old transit systems. But, you are not alone by far in this world.

The game features nice visuals, detailed graphics, and a First Person perspective. The pacing of the game is much slower than what you will find in most First Person Shooters, but it can be nice at times. A quick WARNING to all PC players, this game is graphically INTENSE. Putting all settings to high, I was only able to barely manage the peaks, slowdowns occurred in some spots of many enemies/buildings. And I had recently upgraded to some of the best PC equipment out there on the market. The upside to this is that you can utilize DirectX 11 in this game and it will show you top of the line graphics for it.

Where this game SUCCEEDS:
The gameplay of this game is slightly varied and switches frequently between the main character being alone with nothing but his flashlight and gun in spooky, monster and ghost filled tunnels (Don't TOUCH the ghosts!) all Doom 3 style to jumping into massive gun battles where the enemies will take cover and wait for you to move your gun away from their general direction before taking fire at you from their cover again. The system of having to use gas masks and air filters to survive the environment is a unique aspect, and the fact your enemies can break your mask, requiring you to find a new one, or choke and die adds another, scary and realistic element to get gameplay. The monsters, while eventually predictable, are unique and very detailed; the story is a solid one, and the people seem quite lifelike in their thoughts, emotions, and movements through the world, just like the real world, things are rarely for free, and if you want to survive you must be useful. The game is also deeply immersive the longer you get into it, you can feel a sense of wanting what's best for your character and wanting to continue on.

Where the game FAILS:
Munitions are scarce, you must conserve ammo, and frequently switch weapons to adapt to a current situation or because you ran out of ammo. This game is short, only lasting 10-15 hours depending on the difficulty setting you put it on and your skill in combat situations. Your character is Weak, while this can add an element of realism, getting caught by a stray bullet and dieing from it doesn't make good sense in a GAME. Buying weapons is a joke, you will eventually be able to pick up ANY weapon for sale from the enemy or other places you visit. The game's difficulty comes in bursts, in some areas, the game actually has difficulty, in most, the game is exceedingly easy to breeze through. The ending doesn't come to a solid point, just more of a "rush to the finish" sort of deal. There's no bosses per-say except for one, and even then it becomes an uncommon enemy soon after.

Despite the bad things, I would recommend this game to many people. Not die hard game fans, but to a majority of my gaming friends.



4 out of 5 stars Why Metro 2033 is a good gaming investment.   July 15, 2010
Julius
I've read a ton of reviews prior to purchasing the game, and so my expectations were quite unsure. The game is based off of a book (which I have not read), and you can kind of get that story-book feel in the game. I thought the game story was great. I've never seen graphics like this before, and the battle scenes and monsters are exciting. The monsters are great and the action is great. The downfall, in my opinion, is that the game is too linear. Personally, I would have liked to explore each underground town and return to each underground town whenever I wanted. Free exploration of the towns was a must, but the gamer is too restricted. The develops keep pushing you along (and that is unfortunate. It took a lot away from the game). Also, you can't lean around corners too shoot at enemies or to look for monsters. That is dumb. The AI could have also been better, but I've seen worse (Empire Total War for instance).

Overall, however, the adventure, the story, the thrill of the action, and the amazing graphics and world that has been developed, is well worth $40.00. I've already played it twice, once on each skill level, and now I'm going to play it on the hardest.



5 out of 5 stars Stunning game, but needs the ability to save freely   July 5, 2010
Paul Tinsley (Colorado Springs, USA)
2 out of 3 found this review helpful

I have a pretty hardcore rig, so I have been playing this game maxed out and I have to say, the graphics and fluidity are the best I have seen to date. The game requires quite a lot of stealth and I really missed having the ability to save when I wanted, rather than at pre-defined checkpoints. This would have dropped the game to 4 stars, were it not for the fact that this game plays flawlessly without issue on my system. I can't remember the last game that I played without a crash or hitch, so my hat is off to the excellent standard of software engineering and artwork put into this game.

It isn't a sandbox, and the route through the game is fixed, so you do miss that feeling of freedom. However, if this had been a sandbox game, it would have challenged that heady throne taken by Fallout 3. There is a lot of tension in the game, from the heavy breathing and swift attacks made by the monsters, to the need to find respirator apparatus to survive certain areas. There are a number of tactics that you can employ, such as extinguishing lights, using silent weapons and even shooting off the respirators from your opponents that adds lots of extra dynamics to play.

I obtained the game directly from Steam, and I do have very mixed feelings about using Steam. They have a licensing model that allows them the luxury to completely rid you of all your games with impunity. Whilst I doubt they would do that, most large companies have no sense of benevolence where money is to be made, so I am expecting the draconian grip of control to start squeezing tighter by Steam, once they feel they have secured sufficient market share. It's an inevitable "evil" where large companies are concerned, despite the better wishes of their employees, I suspect.

You take a risk using Steam, but where the quality of this game is concerned, it is money well spent. I have had a great time playing it, and that's what counts at the end of the day.



3 out of 5 stars Plays well with DirectX 10   July 4, 2010
William Hiles (Middleburg, VA)
1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I bought this when looking for something that was as engaging as Bioshock. This didn't satisfy that need, but it is still a good game. As others have reviewed, it is incredibly linear. You have no choice to do much more than run from the start of a section to the end of the section. But that is OK.

The graphics are excellent, but when I tried to play it on DirectX 11, the screen locked up regularly. I have an ATI 5770 on a i920 with 12G of memory. The ATI plays well with DirectX 11 on most games, but not this one.

Overall, it is a good enough game that you don't just stop after the first level (like I did with Wolfenstein 2010) but in the end, there isn't a desire to play it again.


Showing reviews 1-5 of 27


Tags
drm  fps  pc game  post apocalyptic  steam  
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