Showing posts with label xbox 360. Show all posts
Showing posts with label xbox 360. Show all posts

3/05/2012

Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga: Prima Official Game Guide (Prima Official Game Guides) Review

Lego Star Wars: The Complete Saga: Prima Official Game Guide (Prima Official Game Guides)
Average Reviews:

(More customer reviews)
This product is way over priced here. If you go to Prima Guides website you can download the 208 page guide for like less than $14.00. Also the game is great and as also fun and funny. I just thought I'd in formed others that are looking for good deals.

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2/14/2012

Lego Star Wars 2: The Original Trilogy (Prima Official Game Guide) Review

Lego Star Wars 2: The Original Trilogy (Prima Official Game Guide)
Average Reviews:

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A game as big and as full of extras and secrets as Lego Star Wars II, you may need a leg up. Getting some of the hidden Lego Canisters and figuring out what you have to do in Freeplay mode can be bothersome. So of course, there's a strategy guide to give you a leg up. You may find you need it, but on the whole, the guide could've been way better. It isn't that the guide is bad, it's that it's heavily disorganized.
The guide begins, as most of them do, with the basics. Getting you used to the gameplay the way the instruction booklet is supposed to. Here, however, they give you a profile for each and every character. They tell you how to use each character, but to be honest, it's all the same. They give you a little mini-profile and then what they can do. All the jedi can do the same thing: The force, and unfortunately the guide will mention that for every jedi. Afterwards it talks about the transportation used in the game. From speeders to AT-ST walkers.
The guide then talks about the Mos Eisley Cantina. It only talks about the things you can do, but it's not really that in-depth on it. The good news is the guide doesn't have to be in-depth on it. It's easy enough to figure out on your own.
The walkthrough is where I begin to have some of the bigger problems with the guide. Each chapter begins with the overview provided by the game, and then a few story frames depicting what happens in the cutscenes before the start of the actual level. The problem with the walkthrough, however, is that it is heavily disorganized. Nothing is divided into sections (save for the call outs to freeplay mode). So in essence, if you come to a point where you need the guide but you haven't opened it, it'll be hard to find where you are in the walkthrough.
There are no maps to speak of throughout the walkthrough. I wouldn't have a problem with the lack of maps if there were an abundance of screenshots. There aren't an abundance of screenshots. Some of what the guide is trying to say can be rather confusing for the visual learner. They tell me to do something, but there's no screenshot to clarify what they're talking about. What screenshots there are are very small and blurry. To compensate for the blurry and small screenshots there are captions at least. This really does make the guide far better to use than it sounds.
The walkthrough could've been better on the whole. With a little more organization and bit more clarity it could've been far more useful. It does, however, become really helpful when playing through freeplay mode. If you go through freeplay mode, the guide calls out what you can do in freeplay. Since these sections aren't as long as the main walkthrough, they're not as tedious to read through to find yourself.
The walkthrough will get you through the game, it's just that you'll spend much more time reading the walkthrough than playing the game itself.
The guide covers the Bounty Hunter Missions and Gold Brick Bonuses. It hardly says anything about the Power Bricks which I could deal with. However, the part that could be on the divide for most people is the simple fact of whether or not you care that it gives you the cheats to unlock other characters. In some ways, it makes sense that the guide wouldn't give you something like this. After all, cheat codes should be left inside cheat books and the internet. Then again, a strategy guide is a cheap way to get ahead in the game, and just like looking up a cheat, it's optional to whether or not you're going to use it. Personally, a list of cheats should be in the guide, but I won't hold it against the guide one bit.
The main thing that makes me not recommend the guide is the highly disorganized walkthrough. For once I'd much rather go to GameFAQs. There are much more organized and detailed walkthroughs than this.

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Build A Better Galaxy• Complete character and vehicle descriptions with full info on how to unlock all playable characters• Locations of all LEGO canisters and red power bricks to make sure you get 100% completion • Secret LEGO levels revealed • Thorough walkthrough for Story and Freeplay mode for every level. Don't miss a thing!

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8/21/2011

Star Wars: The Force Unleashed II Review

Star Wars: The Force Unleashed II
Average Reviews:

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After reading the Force Unleashed and the Fatal Alliance, both books I found average at best, I was a little worried about reading this second installment. I was picturing our fearless and recently dead Jedi/Sith to once again go force crazy as he fought a "boss level" every third chapter, a storyline that was done to death in the first book. To my surprise and gratitude I was wrong. Sean Williams has out done himself with this one. He has woven a complex and intricate web of emotion and suspense that makes the reader feel as if they are in the head of the main characters.
Juno Eclipse is removed from being Starkillers chauffeur and promoted to a major player within the resistance. A promotion that later bites her in the rear-end as she finds herself in a very unforgiving position later in the book. Sean did a very good job delving into the mind of Juno using her personality and affection towards Starkiller to further the books depth.
Starkiller himself has returned from beyond the grave(maybe) and the shallowness of the gaming storyline to be a well-developed character that is more than just a point A to B stick figure that is heartless and mindless. Sean has taken this character and worked his magic, usually saved for his own non-Star Wars books, and made Starkiller a human who's complexities are far deeper than the savage force wielder slaughtering everything in his path.
As for the other characters we have come to know from the first book, Kota, PROXY, Vader and the Organa's, yes they are there and yes they play very important roles within the storyline but this book has a completely different feel in comparison to the first that leaves these characters as a more supportive than instrumental part of the story. With the story taking place during the resistance there are a few surprise appearances from characters we know and love and as many of you may already know from trailers and commercials Starkiller does come in contact with our beloved Yoda. But be warned, do not look forward to in-depth interaction with these characters, it is my guess they have been thrown in for the sake of the game and are not heavy factors within the book.
All-in-all this book has done wonders to reaffirm my belief that Sean Williams is more than capable of producing a well written, complex and fun story within the Star Wars universe. I have begun to wonder about some of the books being published by Del Ray these days as their story arch's are borderline two-dimensional with only a few "deep and emotional" stand alones coming out once a year.
As for the four star rating. The book is very heavy on emotion and character psychology and the balance between that and the action scenes can be a little muddled, but that is only a minor factor. I was more disappointed with the lack of substance with Yoda and the fact that a very heavy thread to the story was left dangling at the end, I'm sure intentionally for the next installment. A fact that overall was not a big deal, it's just with the ending the way it is it left me with a feeling that only one thing was accomplished by the end of 280 pages when there could have been a lot more.
4.5/5 stars for the story. 4.6/5 on the epic scale. One of my favorites and sure to be read again in the future. Wise you would be to read this book I think.ALL FEEDBACK IS HIGHLY APPRECIATED. THANKS AND GOOD READING.


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NATIONAL BESTELLER The dark side could not seduce him.The Empire could not control him.Death could not defeat him.And now, nothing can stop him from seizing his destiny. As apprentice to Darth Vader, Starkiller was mercilessly schooled in the ways of the dark side and groomed for the ultimate Sith power play: assassination of the Emperor. He served without question, killed without remorse, and lost his heart without warning to beautiful Imperial fighter pilot Juno Eclipse, never suspecting that he was just a tool in the schemes of his masters—until it was too late to escape their lethal betrayal.Juno mourned Starkiller as dead, but now he is back, purged of all memories and programmed to kill—and this time, Darth Vader is determined not to lose his assassin. As fate brings Juno and Starkiller closer to reuniting, they will both have to make a stand. The prize could be freedom. The punishment for failing will be eternal enslavement to the dark side of the Force.Based on a story by Haden Blackman


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