RATING / ESRB / A Created with Sketch. RATING / ESRB / E Created with Sketch. RATING / ESRB / E10 Created with Sketch. RATING / ESRB / M Created with Sketch. RATING / ESRB / T Created with Sketch.
RATING / PEGI / 12 Created with Sketch. RATING / PEGI / 16 Created with Sketch. RATING / PEGI / 18 Created with Sketch. RATING / PEGI / 3 Created with Sketch. RATING / PEGI / 7 Created with Sketch. icon_pin Created with Sketch.

Total Annihilation: Commander Pack

w bibliotece

4.8/5

( 536 Recenzji )

4.8

536 Recenzji

English
Oferta kończy się w dniu: 10/28/2025 15:59 EET
Oferta kończy się za: d g m s
4.990.99
Najniższa cena z ostatnich 30 dni przed zniżką: 0.99
Dlaczego warto kupować na GOG.COM?
BEZ DRM. Aktywacja ani połączenie internetowe nie są wymagane do gry.
Bezpieczeństwo zakupów i zadowolenie. Wsparcie 24/7 i pełen zwrot środków do 30 dni.
Total Annihilation: Commander Pack
Opis
To, co zaczęło się jako konflikt o transfer świadomości z ludzkiego ciała do elektronicznych obwodów maszyn, przerodziło się w wojnę, która zdziesiątkowała miliony światów. Frakcje Core i Arm omal nie wyczerpały zasobów galaktyki w walce o dominację. Obie strony są teraz kompletnie wyniszczone, nie...
Opinie użytkowników

4.8/5

( 536 Recenzji )

4.8

536 Recenzji

{{ review.content.title }}
Szczegóły produktu
1997, Cavedog Entertainment, Klasyfikacja wiekowa ESRB: Teen...
Wymagania systemowe
Windows 10, 1.8 GHz, 2 GB RAM, 3D graphics card compatible with DirectX 9.0c...
Czas gry
22 hGłówna linia fabularna
32 h Główna linia fabularna + dodatkowe zadania
55.5 h Kolekcjoner
30 h Wszystkie style
Opis

To, co zaczęło się jako konflikt o transfer świadomości z ludzkiego ciała do elektronicznych obwodów maszyn, przerodziło się w wojnę, która zdziesiątkowała miliony światów. Frakcje Core i Arm omal nie wyczerpały zasobów galaktyki w walce o dominację. Obie strony są teraz kompletnie wyniszczone, nie mając jakiejkolwiek nadziei na poprawę. Resztki ich armii nadal walczą ze sobą na spustoszonych planetach, a ich wzajemna nienawiść jest podsycana przez ponad cztery tysiące lat wojny totalnej. To walka na śmierć i życie. Dla każdej ze stron jedynym akceptowalnym rezultatem jest całkowita eliminacja przeciwnika.

Total Annihilation (TA) to strategia czasu rzeczywistego (RTS) stworzona przez Cavedog Entertainment pod kierownictwem głównego projektanta Chrisa Taylora. Gra została wydana 30 września 1997 roku i był to pierwszy RTS z trójwymiarowymi jednostkami i terenem. Tytuł doczekał się dwóch dodatków: The Core Contingency wydany 30 kwietnia 1998 roku i Battle Tactics, które miało premierę dokładnie 2 miesiące później, 30 czerwca 1998 roku. W momencie wydania TA minimalne wymagania dla gry obejmowały procesor Pentium 100 MHz i 16 MB pamięci RAM. Oczywiście wymogi te dotyczyły komputerów z 1997 roku; współczesne sprzęty z łatwością przekraczają taką specyfikację, ale nadal zaleca się posiadanie procesora 1 GHz i 512 MB pamięci RAM dla zaktualizowanego silnika gry.

W odległej przyszłości galaktyką rządzi centralny organ ludzi i sztucznych inteligencji zwany Core (skrót od „Consciousness Repository” [tłum. „Repozytorium świadomości”]). Technologiczne i ekonomiczne sukcesy Core pozwoliły ludzkości skolonizować większość Drogi Mlecznej i cieszyć się pokojem i dobrobytem. Jednakże równowaga zostaje zakłócona przez postęp technologiczny, który pozwala na przeniesienie ludzkiej świadomości do maszyn, co w teorii umożliwia nieskończone życie. Proces ten nazwano „wzorcowaniem”. Po tym jak Core wprowadziło wymóg powszechnego wzorcowania jako środka ochrony zdrowia publicznego na obrzeżach galaktyki uformowana zostaje grupa rebeliancka Arm. Jej członkowie odmawiają opuszczenia własnych ciał, by zostać wcielonym w szeregi maszyn Core. Skutkiem tej sytuacji jest wojna trwająca już 4000 lat, w której Arm masowo produkuje klony jako pilotów dla swoich pojazdów, a Core duplikuje wgrane na microchipach świadomości do pilotowania swoich maszyn.

  • Zawiera Total Annihilation i oba rozszerzenia – The Core Contingency oraz Battle Tactics.
  • Ponadczasowy klasyk, który zdobył ponad 57 nagród!
  • Epickie bitwy z setkami jednostek, którym towarzyszy porywająca muzyka skomponowana przez Jeremy'ego Soule'a i setki dostępnych modyfikacji.
  • Różne typy jednostek i budynki w pełnym 3D – na przykład samoloty, czołgi pływające, boty piechoty (k-boty), pojazdy, poduszkowce, statki, łodzie podwodne, zakłady produkujące jednostki, potężne stacjonarne systemy obronne i broń dalekiego zasięgu. Unikalna funkcja śledzenia pozwala graczom obserwować pojedyncze jednostki, całe armie, a nawet pociski.
  • Prawdziwie trójwymiarowy teren na bardzo dużych, generowanych mapach, którego ukształtowanie może być wykorzystywane przez jednostki. TA działa płynnie w wysokich rozdzielczościach, a nawet na nowoczesnych konfiguracjach z dwoma monitorami, dzięki czemu gracze mogą zobaczyć więcej pola bitwy.
  • Liczne typy środowisk, na których można toczyć bitwy, takie jak łąki, lasy, pustynie, archipelagi, otwarte wody, lawa, metal, lód, kryształy, kwas, a nawet powierzchnia księżycy.
  • Ponad 150 oficjalnych jednostek i 25 oficjalnych misji dla każdej frakcji w kampanii dla jednego gracza. Dodatek Core Contingency wprowadza 75 nowych jednostek (w tym cieszącego się złą sławą Krogotha), 50 nowych map, 25 nowych misji i 6 nowych typów światów. Battle Tactics natomiast dodaje 4 nowe jednostki, 6 nowych map i 100 nowych misji. Ostatnia łatka (wersja 3.1c, będąca częścią pakietu) wprowadziła 6 nowych jednostek, w tym wskrzeszającego k-bota!
  • Szczegółowe i emocjonujące kampanie, które skupiają się na dowódcach obu frakcji. Historie Core i Arm rozpoczynają się od prób obrony ojczystego świata protagonisty, które są punktem zwrotnym w trwającej wojnie. Po nich następuje seria bitew na różnorodnych planetach i księżycach, w których armie korzystają z galaktycznych wrót – środka transportu umożliwiającego przemieszczanie się z prędkością nadświetlną). Potem następuje ostateczne uderzenie w ojczysty świat wroga: idylliczne Empyrean należące do Arm lub sztuczny świat Jupiter Brain będący częścią Core Prime. Cele misji obejmują ochronę kluczowej budowli lub obszaru, przejęcie ważnej jednostki wroga lub po prostu wyeliminowanie wszystkich jednostek przeciwnika. Potężniejsze jednostki i bronie są stopniowo odblokowywane w trakcie kampanii po wykonaniu określonych misji lub ukończeniu wydarzeń.
  • Potyczki dla jednego gracza i pełne wsparcie dla trybu wieloosobowego, który umożliwia graczom obserwowanie i dołączanie do bitew oraz tworzenie sprzymierzonych drużyn w celu dzielenia się zasobami, informacjami i jednostkami.
  • Wysoce zaawansowany arsenał broni, w tym lasery, energetyczne karabiny maszynowe (EKM), pociski gwiezdne, pociski plazmowe, generatory błyskawic, paralizatory i głowice nuklearne.
  • Zmienne, takie jak grawitacja, prądy morskie i wiatr, zakłócają skuteczność niektórych rodzajów broni lub zwiększają produkcję zasobów.
  • Środki wywiadowcze do wykrywania lub zagłuszania wrogich jednostek za pomocą radaru i sonaru, zdolność do maskowania lub zapewniania niewidocznej osłony dla jednostek oraz środki pozwalające na odradzanie zniszczonych jednostek z ich wraków.
Dodatkowa zawartość
instrukcja (65 str.) map editor ścieżka dźwiękowa Illustrations grafiki koncepcyjne materiały graficzne
Wymagania systemowe
Minimalne wymagania systemowe:

Mac notice: The game is 32-bit only and will not work on macOS 10.15 and up.

Mac notice: The game is 32-bit only and will not work on macOS 10.15 and up.

Dlaczego warto kupować na GOG.COM?
BEZ DRM. Aktywacja ani połączenie internetowe nie są wymagane do gry.
Bezpieczeństwo zakupów i zadowolenie. Wsparcie 24/7 i pełen zwrot środków do 30 dni.
Czas gry
22 hGłówna linia fabularna
32 h Główna linia fabularna + dodatkowe zadania
55.5 h Kolekcjoner
30 h Wszystkie style
Szczegóły gry
Działa na:
Windows (10, 11), Mac OS X (10.6.8)
Premiera:
{{'1997-10-30T00:00:00+02:00' | date: 'longDate' : ' +0200 ' }}
Rozmiar pliku:
1 GB
Linki:
Klasyfikacja wiekowa:
Klasyfikacja wiekowa ESRB: Teen (Animated Violence)


Języki
English
dźwięk
tekst
Kup serię (2)
Kup wszystkie gry z serii. Jeśli posiadasz już grę z tej serii, nie zostanie ona dodana do Twojego koszyka.
-64%10.983.98
Idź do kasy
Mogą Ci się również spodobać
Inni użytkownicy kupowali również
Opinie użytkowników
Najbardziej przydatne recenzje

Posted on: August 17, 2010

Perhaps the finest work in the RTS genre

Total Annihilation is a game that bucked a lot of trends in the RTS genre, and came away far far better for doing it. Let's break it down: The soundtrack is an excellent place to start, as it will be among the first parts of the game you experience. Simply put, this is some of Jeremy Soule's finest work. Search around for the game's intro on the streaming video site of your choice, and enjoy. Even better, the soundtrack is used dynamically in-game, switching to more energetic tracks when battles swing into high gear and mellowing when things are calm. But how about gameplay mechanics? This is among the first games that found the older "resources and the peons/workers/units that harvest them" mechanic tiresome. You do not build drones or engineers and sic them on a pile of slowly decreasing resources. Instead, you set up structures that gather or produce resources at certain rates. The idea is that the structure will not run out of the resource, it just collects it at a certain speed. For people who have only ever sent harvesters out to collect, this might seem dangerously unbalanced, but I assure you it isn't. You might have infinite resources to collect, but you're gathering them at a slow, automatic rate. There's also a number of ways to gather resources. For energy, you can build solar collectors, or if water is available, tidal generators, or fusion plants can be built. For metal, there are different sized mining structures, and an interesting set of buildings that make metal from extremely large amounts of energy. And of course you can scavenge both from the battlefield, if things are especially tight. For unit behaviors, you have several options readily available in the hud, dictating how aggressive or indifferent to enemies they are, allowing you to avoid the issue of a patrol that foolishly chases an enemy all the way back to their base. Also, when units fire and attack, they use different arcs and trajectories for their shots. Some units fire in high arcs, able to go over hills and obstacles, while others fire in straight lines. Nearly every unit can miss when it fires, as well, which adds a welcome bit of realism. In addition, there's often a real sense of scope to unit ranges. This isn't a game that has artillery that fires a third of the way across your screen; you'll be firing that stuff across the map. There are a number of different maps available: worlds made entirely of metal, or fully submerged water worlds. Island maps or dense jungles. Fights among toxic explosive plants. All different maps, and many requiring a fully different set of tactics and units. Bringing me to perhaps the biggest positive, the units themselves. Speaking plainly, there's a crap load. The Core Contingency expansion adds even more. Fully fleshed out navies (not just one or two ship types), a host of infantry mechs and vehicles, radar jammers, amphibious units ("are those tanks coming out of the water?!), aircraft, hovercraft, and a collection of advanced structures that really add flavor. And the developers, in a very unique idea that I have yet to see replicated in modern games, made it relatively easy to add custom units made by users freely to the game. While some games were allowing the creation of maps, this game did that and more. Users can create their own models and behaviors for units and add them into the game. Search around, and you will find enormous quantities of units and packs of units if you're a fan of customizing your game. To be fair, if the game had a weak spot, it would be story. The story is fairly simple, and acts mostly as an excuse to blow things to bits. You won't be seeing a cutscene every mission. Briefings are simply delivered, with a small bit of flavor text, an objective, a little narration, and then you go. There are no hero units (other than your nameless Commander unit) to rally around. I usually miss heavy story elements in games, but this game delivers heavily enough on the gameplay side of things you'll be hard-pressed to notice. In the end, this is a great example of what the RTS genre needed, rather than pumping out clones of other games with slightly different skins.


Czy to było pomocne?

Posted on: August 20, 2010

To this day it remains my favorite RTS

My first experience with RTS games was with Warcraft 2. Soon after that, I found Command and Conquer. Both were great games that I played for countless hours each. I blindly purchased Total Annihilation on a whim after checking out its box shortly after it was released. It was released at the same time as Age of Empires, another RTS I enjoyed. Suffice it to say,Total Annhilation blew them all away and is still somehow more enjoyable to play than modern RTS games. First of all, let me outline some of the elements within Total Annihilation that set it apart from other games when it was released and then discuss why it is still the best of its kind today. Total Annihilation was the first game of its type to successfully utilize 3D environments. The terrain is filled with destructable objects such as trees that you can use to gather energy from or just let become part of the devastation of battle. The environment plays a big role in Total Annihilation. Gaining the high ground in a skirmish game and building a powerful defensive weapon can completely make the difference. The 3D world affects how missiles are projected and the graphics hold up, even by today's standards. The scale of Total Annihilation is huge. The battles are constant, massive, and utterly epic. Every battle will leave behind scars in the form of a graveyard of wreckage, which can in turn be harvested to gather metal resources or destroyed by the next battle wave. The variety of weapons is also astounding. Even in the original, stand-alone game there was a plethora of options. I was always fond of the Cans and/or Lugers on land, and Brawlers in the air. My favorite defensive weapon is the Annihilator, which, as I mentioned before, is incredibly effective when placed upon a large hill with some defenders to protect it from air attacks. Some of the maps are incredibly huge, especially considering the time it was released. You basically have the flexibility to create as epic of a matchup as you want. Amazingly, being able to select as many units as you wanted to wasn't a standard element of RTS games at this time, Warcraft and Starcraft being major culprits of this. Total Annihilation finally spared us of that ridiculous little roadblock, allowing you to select as many units as you could see. This is another little element that helps you realize the massive scale of the game. Despite it's size and scale, Total Annihilation somehow manages to stay personal. Every unit under your control keeps a tally of how many kills it has. If it single-handedly gets over five, it gains veteran status. This small and seemingly irrelevant feature makes the game just a little more personal and it was something just not seen in RTS games at this time. You'll care for your veterans and probably want to see just how far their skills can be taken by keeping them alive longer than the average cannon fodder. The resource system was quite different than most games at the time and gives the game a uniqueness unmatched until the release of Supreme Commander. In Total Annihilation, there are only two resources, metal and energy. Rather than gathering them and building up a stockhold to use later, you are expected to balance the constant amount you are using with the amount you are gathering (for example, you'd want to be gathering more metal, +20, than the amount you are currently using, -15). You can build storage buildings to store a greater amount and provide greater flexibility or padding for times of need, but it's not necessary for building a strong army and defense. However, if you don't keep a balance, you can run in to some serious problems. Running out of energy will severely inhibit your ability to build things, especially since your metal extractors require energy to work. More commonly, you'll run into issues of running out of metal, which is gathered at a slower rate. Keeping a balance between resources is absolutely key to winning the game, especially if you're playing another human opponent (who likely won't make the same mistake as you and won't hesitate to punish you). Total Annihilation is very customizable and still has a huge, active community. If, despite my insistence that the graphics hold up well today, you're unconvinced and think it needs an upgrade, you can download graphical enhancements that will allow you to zoom in and out and change views while providing higher resolution and texturing. There is also an incredible amount of maps and new units that can be downloaded or created (for the adventurous type). I would also be willing to bet that you'll always be able to find a multiplayer counterpart, though I mostly stick to playing over LAN with friends. Large and active communities, especially for older games, are always a testament to a game that has transcended time. For all the great things that Total Annihilation offers, I have two things to warn people about. One, I would recommend starting with vanilla Total Annihilation. There is so much content added with the expansions and especially with the downloadable units that you may be overwhelmed. As a seasoned Total Annihilation player, I was completely out of my league playing with a downloadable unit pack simply because I didn't know what units were effective and what buildings did what. Second, Total Annihilation is not about building a society (no Sim City elements). In other games, such as Age of Empires and games similar to it, your "civilization" really just serves as a way to advance, gather resources, and build a stronger army, making it not much different than Total Annihilation. However, those games do like to put an emphasis on building up a society even if it's nothing more than a red herring. In Total Annihilation, the focus is simply smiting your enemies with as much force as possible. All of my friends that played Total Annihilation ten years ago still prefer to play it than firing up a game of its unofficial sequel Supreme Commander, which feels somehow less personal to them. Though it's hard to explain this phenomena completely, I tend to blame this on the tactical zooming feature - something is lost when you're not in the firefights up close and personal. Being a seasoned RTS fan having played everything from the Warcrafts, Rise of Nations, Starcrafts, Age of Empires, Command and Conquers, Supreme Commanders, Company of Heroes, and Empire Earths of the genre, I must say that Total Annilation stands head and shoulders above the rest.


Czy to było pomocne?

Posted on: August 17, 2010

Awesome RTS

I spend ages playing this when it came out - it may lack the cut-scenes and plot from its C&C and Starcraft contemporaries, but it more than made up for it in innovative features - queuing commands, radar warfare with scanners and jammers, workable defences including artillery worthy of the name, the wonderfully animated hordes of unit types done in full 3d.... Awesome. And it still scales brilliantly on modern computers - more units, bigger maps, more annihilation!


Czy to było pomocne?

Posted on: August 24, 2010

Shunned by the press, loved by gamers!

This game really was a suprise to me. I still remember the day I bought it. Is was during a school excursion, and I had absolutely no Idea WHY the heck I chose this game. No advertising, no Hype created by the press... in fact, the gaming magazines I read at this time wrote more of a slating review, giving this title only half a page,whith 6 out of 10 Points, if any. But I did not remember I had read them, so different was the image of how this game could be I got while staring at the screenshots and reading the game´s specs. I just had a feeling, an hunch, so to say that there was something special inside this box. So I bought it... It promised: 1) Fully scalable graphics!! While Starcraft or C&C still worked with 640x480 (or worse) resolution, TA could be maxed out to 1600x1200 or even beyond. It was unbelievable for us little boys! How could one game be so advanced?? 2) Large maps. Even larger maps for those whith 64megs of RAM !!! How awesome was that?? A RTS that used all of your aviable RAM? And let you play even bigger maps if you upgrade your pc?! (Needless to say, this was the sole reason me and my friends were standing at the local pc-dealers shop demanding MORE RAM shortly thereafter! ) 3) Hundreds of units. AT ONCE! On one map. How could that be playable? SC was almost unplayable for me if more than 30 units were on screen. Not to mention c&c, where a pack of 9 bigger units often won the game. I was intrigued. 4) Orchestral Soundtrack. By Jeremy WHO??? Why would a game need an Orchestra ? If I remember correctly, they went to Prague to record it whith the Chech´s National Orchestra. Wow! That was something. But Classic? Not heavy metal? That´s not good! (I did not know HOW WRONG I was back then..) So to shorten things a bit: All, and I repeat ALL the things promised on the back of the package were (playable) reality! You could max out your monitor, and for the first time, a game matched the desktop resulition !!! WOW !!! It was plain awesome to get 8 (or UP TO 10!! when everyone fullfilled the RAM-prerequisites) in a LAN-game fighting each other in a war which really felt like it was heaving to and fro. You were leading a "tide of iron" towards your enemy´s base, only to get pushed back by his well organized counterattack. But never was there a time when you ran out of units and had to wait for your new "3 mighty units " to be produced, like in SC or C&C. How nice it was to tell your factorys to produce countless units one after another. Yes, no "unit production cue" like in all the other RTSs. Ordering 500 units? No problem. Wait for the first 20 to become produced, take them to battle and when you return to your base, 40 new ones will be waiting for your command. Sweet! This game IS the best RTS, if you are into large scale battles. If you like small skirmishes, go for SC or C&C. Even the newer SupremeCommander, which is made by the same team who made TA back then, does not quite offer the same dynamic battle experience TA did. (I use mods for SupCom to make it "feel" more like TA - that should say all, does it not??) ´Nuff said ! BUY it, if you have´nt already !


Czy to było pomocne?

Posted on: August 18, 2010

Great fun and still the leading innovator

TA is a tremendously fun game that still looks great and and plays very well. It was also the biggest innovator in RTS's and well ahead of its time for many years. For one thing, it was 3D when games were still using sprites, including Starcraft. Vehicles ran over obstacles and you could see their undersides when they had to negotiate an odd bit of turf. Jet fighters did not just change their heading in a way that looked like a jerky version of an umbrella spining from above, but turned over in flight to make sharp turns. These units looked like units, not cartoon pictures of units. Projectiles shot further depending on the height of the placement of guns, and trajectories were calculated in a 3D world. Projectiles varied the time they took to hit, rather than hitting instantly because, unlike the code in games of its time, the code did not tell them that a shot fired is a shot that hits and hits immediately. Best of all -- and this was what made Starcraft the biggest retreat to the past after a game like TA had come along -- was that the realistic physics model meant that there are are no hard counters. There is no table that tells you that certain projectiles or units can't hit you because the game simply decides to disallow it. If the trajectory and speed work, you get hit! So you can't hover over someone and expect not to be hit by any bullets or missiles just because they don't have the one hard counter the designers have allowed you to use. You still have a chance of getting hit, as long as the physics work out. It is possible to counter any unit with (enough of) any other one. This makes fights more than a race to the uberunit or hard counter. So you can fight in a way that makes sense rather than follows some lame rule book or wins with one and only one unit. And that lets you pursue very unconventional strategies, and make very unlikely comebacks. One of the best things about TA is that coming from behind to win is extremely possible and indeed happens all the time. That makes TA a game to continue to play to the bitter but still at least faintly hopeful end, with some real gut-busting tenacity, instead of quitting out from when your enemy gets his superunit before you get the only unit that will counter it. One of the things you will not read talked about now, but was also huge when TA came out, is the incredibly usefulness and fluidity of the user interface. All others were VERY cumbersome and limited in comparison. TA's was lean in all the right ways, but you could still do quite complex things very rapidly. TA let you queue up factories to build units in orders as complex as you liked, and to cancel or partially cancel them with equal finesse. It let you manage units in small or large groups, and even assign single units to more than one group without losing the previous group assignment. You could set precise paths for all your units, whether on patrol or as part of the process of their being made in the factory, . You could set their responses on those patrols, from repairing and building to fighting and chasing, fighting without chasing, etc. There were key assignments for every kind of the many different sorts of vehicles, so moving and fighting orders of (and generally still unmatched) complexity were possible. FInally, interesting things were done by the mod community, from units to great maps to my favorite, the recorder. The recorder was a plug-in that let you record games and play them back later for fun and study. It made a fantastic way to study your own weaknesses and learn from others' strategies. There are still hundreds if not thousands of games out there to watch that reveal all sorts of strategic ideas and map-specific strategies, or are just like an incredible action movie with all the boring parts taken out. I can't mention everything good about the game in this already long review, but I must mention the sound and soundtrack. I still remembered clearly some of the jarring thuds and crushing recoil sounds of the game's guns. Absolutely incredible and it made battles very exciting! And composer Jeremy Soule's soundtrack was fantastic. Never omnipresent or overbearing, the full orchestral sound was rousing and beautiful; it seemed, frankly, far too good for a video game! Finally, check these out for great help with the game: Forums: http://tauniverse.com/forum/ Maps: http://www.ratpacker.com/Maps/Maps.html Commands: http://www.tauniverse.com/forum/showthread.php?t=38037&highlight=metal+heck Great 3rd party site: http://www.tauniverse.com/ wiki campaign strat guide: http://strategywiki.org/wiki/Total_Annihilation wind and tides chart (for energy): http://it-is-law.com/dump/TA/TA%20Map%20Wind%20&%20Tides.htm Game replayer: http://www.clan-sy.com/frame.html Recorded games: http://tadrs.tauniverse.com/


Czy to było pomocne?

Coś poszło nie tak. Spróbuj odświeżyć stronę.

This game is waiting for a review. Take the first shot!
{{ item.rating }}
{{ item.percentage }}%
Oczekiwanie na więcej recenzji
Wystąpił błąd. Spróbuj ponownie później.

Inne oceny

Oczekiwanie na więcej recenzji

Dodaj recenzję

Edytuj opinię

Twoja ocena:
Wszystkie pola są wymagane
Nie wiesz, co napisać? Zacznij od tego:
  • Co sprawiło, że grałeś dalej?
  • Jakim typom graczy ta gra by się spodobała?
  • Czy gra była uczciwa, trudna, czy w sam raz?
  • Jaka funkcja szczególnie się wyróżniała?
  • Czy gra działała dobrze na twoim komputerze?
Niewłaściwe treści. Twoje recenzje zawierają wulgarny język. Niewłaściwe treści. Linki są niedozwolone. Niewłaściwe treści. Treść zawiera bełkot. Tytuł recenzji jest zbyt krótki. Tytuł recenzji jest zbyt długi. Opis recenzji jest zbyt krótki. Opis recenzji jest zbyt długi.
Nie wiesz, co napisać?
Filtry:

Brak recenzji spełniającej wybrane kryteria

Napisane po
English Deutsch polski français русский 中文(简体) Inne
Napisane przez
Zweryfikowanych posiadaczyInne
Dodane
W ciągu ostatnich 30 dniW ciągu ostatnich 90 dniW ciągu ostatnich 6 miesięcyW dowolnym czasiePo premierzePodczas wczesnego dostępu

GOG Patrons, którzy pomagają zachować tę grę
{{controller.patronsCount}} GOG Patrons

Błąd wczytywania GOG Patrons. Odśwież stronę i spróbuj ponownie.

Usunąć tę recenzję?

Czy na pewno chcesz trwale usunąć swoją recenzję dla Total Annihilation: Commander Pack? Tej czynności nie można cofnąć.
Czy na pewno chcesz trwale usunąć swoją ocenę dla Total Annihilation: Commander Pack? Tej czynności nie można cofnąć.

Zgłoś tę recenzję

Jeśli uważasz, że ta recenzja zawiera nieodpowiednie treści lub narusza zasady naszej społeczności, daj nam znać dlaczego.

Dodatkowe informacje (wymagane):

Proszę podać co najmniej znaków.
Proszę ograniczyć liczbę znaków do .
Ups! Coś poszło nie tak. Spróbuj ponownie później.

Zgłoś tę recenzję

Zgłoszenie zostało pomyślnie przesłane.
Dziękujemy za pomoc w utrzymaniu pełnej szacunku i bezpiecznej społeczności.