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At the beginning of your epic adventure, a mercenary mission takes you to the far north - but you’re also following up a mysterious lead at the same time – the first clue you’ve been given since Kyra’s disappearance. You're shocked during a meeting with...
At the beginning of your epic adventure, a mercenary mission takes you to the far north - but you’re also following up a mysterious lead at the same time – the first clue you’ve been given since Kyra’s disappearance. You're shocked during a meeting with the delegates of a dark Brotherhood - your sister’s kidnappers are indeed after your family’s relic. Whether there’s any truth in your family being the chosen ones or not, the others obviously believe it - and if you ever want to see Kyra again, you’ll have to act swiftly.
You are the only person able to unlock the secrets of a dead god's tomb, and all the forces in the land want your help to seize its power.
包含内容
内容
Epic Edition
Epic Edition Complete
手册(130页)
艺术设定集
高清壁纸
地图
头像
mocap session
素描
海报
Two Worlds Digital Artbook
In-Game Items
Two Worlds Pinball
Set of HD Wallpapers
Moveshots & gif animations
Strategy Guide (English)
Strategy Guide (German)
Soundtrack (MP3)
Soundtrack (WAV)
系统要求
最低系统配置要求:
推荐系统配置:
Mac notice: The game is 32-bit only and will not work on macOS 10.15 and up.
推荐系统配置:
Mac notice: The game is 32-bit only and will not work on macOS 10.15 and up.
Completely unstable - crashes every 5-10 minutes. I was prepared to give it a try anyway by simply saving often, but then it crashed on save and corrupted it. Unplayable.
I hadn't really heard of this game before, but I bought it on a whim after reading some of the reviews here. I was profoundly unimpressed for the first hour or so, but once I stopped worrying about the skill trees and figuring out the "right" things to do first, I really started to fall in love with how big and well fleshed-out this world is.
The environments in this game deserve special praise because they actually feel like a real country, with terrain and architecture shifting gradually into strikingly different regions. The main quest is interesting enough as RPGs go, but the side quests impressed me more with how inventive a lot of them are, especially in the cities. The dialogue is actually really well written (or translated), and the voice acting is decent on average. The writing has a very nice, often subtle sense of humor, and you'll especially enjoy it if you don't mind a little casual misogyny here and there. (There are multiple side-quests that revolve around dealing with wives or female relatives who are just too bitchy for the male NPCs to deal with themselves, and some of the dialogue might as well have been taken from a Henny Youngman routine.)
You will probably enjoy this game most if you are like me and really like collecting shiny new equipment. There's a huge array of genuinely unique-looking armor and weapons to be had in this game. I honestly enjoyed this way more than I did Oblivion, largely because I rarely found new items in Oblivion that were better than what I was already carrying. I also disliked that enemies leveled up with you in Oblivion. I play games for the adolescent power fantasies they let me play out, and I really enjoy the heck out of just wading through a pack of enemies that would have destroyed me a few hours before. You get that in Two Worlds (along with a lot of new, stronger enemies to work up to), and I appreciate it.
Overall, this is a quality game with a lot of depth to it. It takes some time to get your bearings, but it is definitely worth the effort.
this is for anyone who is having problems with playing this game with a controller click on the start windows button then type regedit then click on the regedit file then open the HKEY_CURRENT_USER then open the software file then open the reality pump file then click on the interface file then double click on enablepad and then change 0 to 1 then click on ok and then launch the game and with any luck you will be able to play the game with a controller
This game was slated on release when I bought it, coming in the big-budget shadows of Oblivion like it did. It was clunky, cheesy and somewhat silly. But I rather enjoyed its Eastern European charms, and in some ways it surpassed Oblivion, especially when it came to inventory, crafting and magic. On the whole it was a lot of fun and I thoroughly enjoyed eploring Antaloor, even if the much-hyped dragons they boasted about turned out to be rubbish.
However, what really defines this game for me is the epic soft-metal menu music. It rocks.
When I first heard it I laughed my socks off. Surely it was a joke? Or at least a very tongue-in-cheek nod towards musical fantasy tropes. Seductive warbling vocals mispronouncing every fifth or sixth word leading to hysterical shrieking, with multipart progression from gentle fantasy synth to heavy rock guitars and back to gentle harp - it had it all, and you could imagine the singer standing in shiny golden armour at the top of a hill, a long flowing purple cape waving in the wind as she surveys a battlefield below a dark blood-red sky, singing her expressive heart out and waving her lithe pale limbs like a latter-day Kate Bush goddess-figure. Hilarious!
But then it grew on me until I realised it was just fantastically awesome in every way possible. Eventually I nearly always listened to the entire track upon entering the game. I love it.
I played the sequel earlier in the year, and, though a lot better in many ways, I really missed the atmosphere of the original game, which I played on an Xbox 360 I no longer have. And it didn't have anything to match the epic menu music of Two World.
I saw Two Worlds in the Gog sale for the price of a cheap cup of coffee, and thought I might like to play it again. But even if I don't get round to it (thanks to a gaming backlog of about 250 titles) at least I can fire it up and list to That Tune again.
I like this game. I play it for the second time already as I played it several years ago when game was released. Now I bought it in weekend discount and I am glad I did it. It isn't perfect but I like open-world RPG games. I think it enetrains me more than Skyrim which started to bore me but it is a matter of opinion. I very appreciate GOG games because they are mostly cheap and first of all patched and without any stupid protections as Starforce is or was.
Some people don't like this game and find at it some imperfections as bad NCP voises, strange handling , bad plot, plain quests and maybe not too nice graphics but I think it isn't quite so. For that reason I can recommend this game for all who like RPG games and a large open varied world.