Armada : METRO 3D AND SEGA: Video Games

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Fulfillment by Amazon (FBA) is a service we offer sellers that lets them store their products in Amazon's fulfillment centers, and we directly pack, ship, and provide customer service for these products. Something we hope you'll especially enjoy: FBA items qualify for FREE Shipping and Amazon Prime.If you're a seller, Fulfillment by Amazon can help you grow your business. Learn more about the program.THIS IS ARMADA VIDEOGAME VERSION FOR SEGA DREAMCAST. Armada is pretty impressive technically. The ship's designs are interesting; the effects are plentiful, and the frame rate is seamless. Even with tons of ships onscreen, Armada never slows down. While Armada does have a natural visual disadvantage of taking place in the void of space, locations such as planets are well modeled and well detailed. Armada's music is light orchestral-sounding background music that does a good job of making the game sound epic and spacey. While the sound effects are pretty repetitive and possibly mixed too high, they do their job well. Additionally, conversations in the game are handled well through digitized speech. They don't drag on like some games' conversations do; they get the point across, and the acting isn't terribly grating, either. Top-down space shooters, so popular in the late '80s, have gone the way of leg warmers and Mr. T. With the influx of richly textured 3-D worlds and interactive environments, old-school shooters aren't exactly in massive demand. But Armada for the Dreamcast boldly bucks that trend by giving gamers more than just a rehashed shooter. Armada takes the addictive formula of breakneck shooting action and melds it ingeniously with role-playing game (RPG) elements such as involved character interaction and a growth system based on experience points. As a member of Allied Command, you must annihilate the destructive Armada whose reign threatens all humankind. But behind this simplistic premise lies a deep gameplay system, where you travel within an enormous galaxy filled with space stations, supernovas, planets, and a battery of Armada ships. Although you are assigned primary missions, there are plenty of secondary objectives, spaceship tweaking, and status building during the nonlinear gameplay. In this way Armada cleverly interjects rapid shooting action with involved strategy elements to create a unique experience. Throw in four-player simultaneous play--with up to four people onscreen at once--and Armada has plenty of multiplayer fun as well. --Sajed Ahmed Pros: Loaded with elements of sci-fi, fast shooters, and tactical play 6 distinct races to choose from RPG-like credit system, where you earn credits to spend on tweaking your ship Create and name your own character Cons: The environments are muted Gameplay can become monotonous Part Diablo, part Gauntlet, and part Starcraft, Metro3D's Armada is a space-faring action-RPG that pits the six races of Homo Sapiens eleven millennia in the future against a mysterious biomechanical threat known as the Armada The game's universe is near infinite in size, and its genres are wide in scope. As captain of a formidable craft (upgradable to deadly and beyond with experience) you war against an alien horde, perform quests, gain experience, create trade routes, and piece together the plot of this space opera of epic proportions. Here's the deal: Humanity fled Earth in the early fourth millenium. For the following ten millennia, deadly biomechanical aliens known as the Armada waged genocidal war against the humans throughout the diaspora of space. The six "tribes" of humans found each other in the galactic safe house of the Nexus Cluster and joined together to fight as one. In a lot of ways, Armada is an RPG. Your character has stats: weapon, science, engineering, tactical, and navigation. You can choose from any of the six races, each having its own personal or technological strengths and weaknesses. Terran ships are the sturdiest, Scarab craft are stealthy, Drakken craft are versatile, and so on. Like most RPGs, it's all about power. As you gain experience, your stats increase. You can also upgrade to more-powerful ships with more power-up "slots." You can purchase new devices and hardware from any of the races to integrate into your craft. And when you defeat Armada foes, you can salvage pieces of their bizarre technology. This is where things get really interesting, and what may separate Armada from the linearity that plagues so many of today's RPGs. Designer Mark Jordan told us how you can influence the advancement of the Allied races in more ways than by just zapping aliens. "You can... accelerate each race's research rate and path they traverse through their tech tree by donations or sale of Armada technology to a particular race's star base." So you're not just a single active character in a static environment. Your actions affect the progress of individual races and as a result, the entire political and technological milieu of the game. For all its complexity, Armada looks to be first and foremost an action game. The controls are designed for combat. You have rotation, thrust, and fire, as well as shields and a stealth mode that tax your limited energy. Each race has its designated special weapon as well. One has a tractor beam; another can heal multiple Allied ships. Others weapons include a save cannon, an engine blaster, and the ominous -sounding burn fields and link lasers, whose functions are still a mystery. All ships also have a phase bomb (remember the smart bombs from Defender?) that affects all onscreen enemies. The screens we've seen so far certainly look like an action game. In fact, what we've seen looks more like a superpowered Asteroids than an action version of Starcraft. Think a heavily upgraded version of EA's Genesis and PC classic, StarFlight, and you're on the right track. No linear-scripted adventure game, Armada promises to be open-ended and versatile. Though there is a definite endgame goal, the universe itself is near infinite and the game doesn't end when you solve the final quest. The designers say they didn't want to stop people from having fun and going new places after all their hard work. Hidden races, powerful ancient artifacts, and the capacity for four-person multiplayer action add longevity to what already promises to be a diverse game of stellar proportions. --Copyright ©1999 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited. GameSpot and the GameSpot logo are trademarks of GameSpot Inc. -- GameSpot Review

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