Not only do you get an improved product but more bang for
the buck with the other games added in.
Not exact matches
This
game preforms good on split screen but is small... wish they had simul view back then... I say buy at 20
bucks at highest, beat the
game, get to highest level, then buy the DLC if you can...
other then that it repeats
with no decision
They had the indie market down pat
with Xbox Live Arcade, an XNA development kit that allowed people to publish
games for 100
bucks on their platform, and had such hits like Fez, Super Meat Boy, Braid, Limbo, and so many
others providing even more reasons to not only buy an xbox, but to become a developer themselves.
My wife calls it the zelda
game because it is a top down view
game that focuses on a room of baddies at a time like the nes zelda
game, and you have an inventory of bombs and keys, and a heart bar like zelda, but the twist is that it is a different run
with different power ups that interact
with each
other in different ways, This
game will stay in my rotation, and for the price tag of 15
bucks for the base
game, and 10
bucks for the dlc it is well worth the price of admission.
... i pay 50
bucks a year to play online
with friends on COD or
other games.
Then wait for Steam sales or buy it
with a few
bucks off on some
other game marketplace.
But you can also pick up a sealed copy of sf4 for 15
bucks or so, and when you look at that and
other console
game comparisons it doesn't seem worth it to me... It does add something that you can play it wherever you are which you can't
with a console
game, but... the controls take away a little for me.
Splinter Cell: Conviction occupies a unique place in a gaming hall of shame already full of the greed, shortsightedness and incompetence of publishers who seem to hold the PC
gamer in contempt; unique because whereas many of these
other games are second - rate console ports, converted to PC to make a quick
buck at the customer's expense, Splinter Cell: Conviction is a genuinely good
game, but
with its needlessly restrictive and ill - conceived DRM all but compromises both the accomplishments of its designers and the good will that would otherwise be flowing from a grateful PC gaming public.
The
buck will stop
with a small group of scientists, politicians and
other high level interests running this shell
game.