利用隐匿式和伪装手段,破坏火车,摧毁桥梁,炸毁敌方设施,直击纳粹战争机器的核心。当你努力将压迫势力赶出城市的各个区域时,单调的黑白画面会变成彩色,象征你已激励城镇居民。你煽动的人越多,他们越能干预战斗帮助你,或帮你快速逃脱德军的追捕。《破坏者》以全新的视角呈现了第二次世界大战,并融入了戏剧性的电影元素。立即在 PC 上下载此游戏,亲身体验其中的行动与阴谋。
Okay, this is an absolutely amazing game. I've played in on the console years ago and loved it. I was eager to get this thing going on my PC but . . . it absolutely does not work. And no, my system is up to spec: in fact, thats the problem. Nowhere on GOG does it warn people that if your system is reasonably powerful and new, the game will absolutely not work: so fair warning for everyone out there. Of course, GOG refunded my money because a) its their fault and b) that's just the kind of fair-minded people that they are. They've assured me a patch is in the works, but until then, stay away! or dust off one of your older PC's and have fun!
Its holds up perfectly graphically, runs great on modern software/hardware and one of the few great WW2 french resistance video games. Also using the offline GOG installer it runs better than the steam version so keep that in mind.
It has the "stealth" tag in the description, which is why I purchased it. There is no way to stealth most of the missions. This is a third person shooter, period. If you want stealth, I would not recommend this title. If you enjoy being shot at by endless waves of Nazis, this is your game.
Bland gameplay, bad writing, cardboard characters, muddy graphics and lighting, unconvincing physics, wooden animations, sloppy gunplay... this isn't the worst game I've ever played, but I can't think of a single thing it does that wasn't done better elsewhere--frequently in a handful of other games.
Late XBox 360 is crawling with better sandboxes--my personal preferences run toward Saint's Row, but Mafia is probably a closer tonal and historical fit. L.A. Noir has more satisfyingly clunky driving. For better climbing and parkour, go for anything Assassin's Creed. For stylish WWII-era stealth, there's Velvet Assassin--not a great game, but not so aggressively bland. For better shooting Nazis, choose from any of dozens of shooters. For boring ethnic stereotypes of the Irish, French, or German... did you actually want a recommendation there?
In all, this was a frustrating play. The thing is, not a lot of games try to do *all the things all at once*. Which you could laud this game for, if it succeeded at them or the synergies were more than the sum of their parts. Instead I played minigame after minigame where I thought, "Oh, this is just like [XYZ] title... only worse in every way." And then my character would say "let's show them how we do it in the old country!" or another pair of breasts would walk across the screen for no reason or a side character would spout some half-baked anachronistic nonsense. And after some point I could no longer ignore that I was spending my time on the worst possible interpretation of an interesting setting, game style, and story I've seen in a long time.
If you're such a huge fan of sandboxes that you've played through all the GTAs and Saints Rows and Prototypes and Mafias and Just Causes and Red Factions and Assassin's Creeds and you STILL. NEED. MORE.
...
Well then I still wouldn't recommend it. You'll be disappointed as all of the above games are a significant cut about this twaddle.
No complaints about the price nor stability issues. Graphics options not available in-game can be found in a file in the install folder called VideoSetup.exe. Best of luck to you.
The Saboteur is a game I really enjoyed playing, and a game that shows that the sum of its parts may be better than expected.
The game has you flung in the middle of the Nazi occupation of Paris, shortly after it happened. The story is an average revenge one, though it does get points for not being the cliche one of "Repel the invaders" or "Protect your country". Your character doesn't care for the conflict, he just wants to kill a single man. In trying to do so though, he will use enough explosives to level a small mountain.
The game itself is an open world one, even if the world is small (Paris and its surroundings). You are free to move around, accepting possible quests (though you'll have to unlock them first), looking for collectibles, blowing stuff up or just causing mayhem. The city is divided into zones, with each zone requiring proper papers to pass through the checkpoints, but you can always either ignore the checkpoints and look for a different way through, or run through them and attempt to evade the Nazis. It does sometime help to go through such a checkpoint, blow a few guard towers up and die (or load), since anything you destroyed outside a mission will remain destroyed once the mission is started, which can make your life easier.
For getting around, the game has quite a few vehicles, though the driving isn't anything exceptional. It does the job, and that's all. Alternatively, you can always climb up to the rooftops of Paris, though again, the climbing and free running isn't something to write home about.
Finally, the gunplay. You can carry up to two weapons on you at a time, as well as grenades, dynamite and RDX. There is a bit of variety for the weapons, though I usually found myself using a sniper rifle and either a silenced weapon or a rocket launcher, depending on my mood/target. Gunplay is the usual 3rd person cover based regenerating health style, which once more just does the job.
Somehow though, a game where most of the mechanics are mediocre ends up being quite enjoyable. It could be all the nods and references you find in the game ("Somebody Set Up Us the Bomb" is a mission for example), as well as the planning of how to sabotage a group of targets without getting noticed, or the mayhem that ensues once your planning proves inadequate.
The game unfortunately still retains a few bugs, though GOG is working on fixing those as well, and the price may be too high for a few people. All in all though, it is an enjoyable game that should give you quite a few hours of enjoyment.