Lost planet 1 free download for pc






















For how long depends on how easily pleased you are. On the platforming levels - where you generally have to get to the top of something - it's down to you and your grappling hook.

These will give you a crippling Anti-Persian Syndrome. That is, you'll feel like the most ham-legged, dundering clod ever to fall off the same ledge three times. Getting knocked about by rockets, bombs and the vibrations from overhead moths fact! Even the Vital Suits are pretty frail, and while they're fun to fanny about in, there's a slight reluctance to obey your commands that can really leave you feeling cheated in a boss battle.

Take your revenge fight with Green Eye - it's a medium-length battle with three stages, and it's a frigging pain when you're getting crushed against the wall by a massive carapace, with spears of ice slamming into your dad's Vital Suit, and the camera won't snap out of its involuntary neck-breaking aerial view.

Actually, it could very well have changed angle, but you can't see shit for the relentless explosions. It's impressive, exciting and pretty satisfying to dispatch the patricidal arthropod.

But it's also inelegant unresponsive and frustrating. At one point, I restartednthe Green Eye level from the beginning rather than the waypoint and I was faced with an already-fought corridor of pirates.

Annoyed,bI decided to run through the entire level, and was a little surprised to find that I made it through, without any serious damage or game penalty. Why did I bother the first time? It certainly wasn't to collect the hidden coins, which are the only 'bonus' items in the game. Even Capcom's traditional ranking system is missing - there's no S rank to strive for, and no experience to spend on bionic ankles.

It boils down to that basic criticism again; this is pretty much an amiable, mindless shooter, with a fairly lip-flubbing storyline to push things along. The Al is Passable - certainly as intelligent as someone who's just smugly written the phrase "patricidal arthropod" in an attempt to sound educated - but it does have some suicidally dumb moments.

In the first level, your colleagues run motionlessly into walls, and several enemies remained inactive in later levels until I'd shot them three times. What was that? Is that what I think Yes, it is -someone's shooting me! The bastard nerve of it! Additionally - and this might not be a deal-breaker for most people -I do have an expectation that if a guy is wearing gas cylinders on his back, I should be able to shoot said gas cylinders. And when I do that, he should say "Oooh, shit!

Doesn't happen here. Twenty points off the final score. I'm being harsh, I'll admit, but having played and enjoyed the version on a happy, mindless level - it would have scored around 74 - the PC port seems to be lacking.

My DX9 PC far exceeded the stated requirements, yet apart from a super-rapid spinning icon on the menus, the game itself chugged unhappily along at between fps, and suffered at busier times.

Get Vista? Not for this game I won't. Finally, Lost Planet isn't designed to be played with mouse and keyboard. You can do it, but nudging the mouse a fraction equates to a clumsy nudge on a thumbstick, making precise aiming impossible. To rub it in, there's no mousesensitivity slider, and when you do play with a controller, there's no option to invert the Y axis.

If this is the future of Vista gaming - console gaming in a swivel chair - then Forgoing to fold my arms and frown. I'm sounding like I didn't enjoy ost Planet, then I'm sorry. I can definitely say I was entertained, and there's a fair chunk of fun to be wrung from the sponge - even with the limited multiplayer modes. In the end though, it's just a good - not brilliant - inelegant PC port. Fighting a myriad of butt-ugly bugs may be tough, but try fending them off while also enduring sub-zero temperatures.

Not so cool, huh? Well, in Lost Planet, you're not only battling insects, but also the weather--your life drops with the degrees, leaving you with just one option: exterminate enemies and use their energy as temporary heat pacle.

As one face among many, you work your way through darkened hallways, automatic gun at the ready. After blowing open a door, you and your crew rappel down to a larger hangar. Immediately, a bus-sized, buglike creature rolls toward you as you leap out of the way and open fire. The beast loses its fight--and life--and turns to ice: It shatters as you put one final bullet into it. The next room has far less imposing enemies--flying, sleek-looking creatures with flagellalike appendages lining their bodies.

Though numerous, they go down easily. But the relative breather is shortlived. A gigantic, multilegged, horned grub of an alien--dwarfing that first pest--bursts through a wall and commences a devastating attack, wiping out most of your compatriots with one gust of its breath, which freezes and shatters them.

It's all you can do to run and pray. Lost Planet starts at a gallop, as any good action-shooter should, and it keeps the upbeat pace going for a few more levels. Trudging through knee-deep snow and swapping through a standard arsenal of weapons, you take out scores of the insectlike alien Akrid.

And despite the main character's methodical pace, Lost Planet manages to nail a nimble feel--for the most part. With the default control setup, tapping the controller's left and right bumper buttons quick-spins you 90 degrees in the corresponding direction, which isn't intuitive but is useful when you get the hang of it.

Also, a handy grappling hook keeps things moving vertically though support for midair grappling would've sated our tingling Spidey sense. Quick feet are necessary, since the action has a very arcadey slant to it: Smaller critters pour out of generators, and all the Akrid have glowing weak spots for optimal shooting, sometimes in multiple parts, allowing you to blow off some of a creature's far-too-numerous legs.

And graphically, the game's a stunner at least in high-def--standard-def has more whiteout conditions. The game is played through the third person over-the-shoulder view. Players are able to switch between first-person and third-person at any moment. Players either travel on foot or ride various types of mechanized suits called Vital Suits VS. They can pick up weapons lying on the ground and fire multiple weapons at once. On foot, players are able to use a grappling hook to pull themselves up to normally hard-to-reach places, or to hook onto a VS and hijack it.

Players can replenish their thermal energy level by defeating enemies or activating data posts. Lost Planet 2. Data posts also allow players to use their navigational radars to see incoming enemies.

The campaign consists of 11 levels. Players engaging in an online battle. Multiplayer also requires players to monitor their thermal energy level, but here, reaching zero does not cause death. Instead, the characters cannot use VSs or fire the weapons which require thermal energy.

Players score points by killing other players and activating posts, and they lose points for being killed or committing suicide. The game starts with Wayne, his father Gale, and a band of snow pirates taking on a mission to kill a giant Akrid known as Green Eye. Wayne is left drifting in the snow and is frozen solid for 30 years. Wayne wakes up and finds himself in the care of Yuri Solotov and his crew of snow pirates; Luka and Rick.

Basil tells him that Yuri has killed her husband and that she was looking for revenge. At the same time, Yuri mysteriously disappears, leaving Wayne to question his loyalty. Wayne barely escapes back to Luka and finds that their pirate fortress has been sieged and that Rick has been taken captive. Post grab is a mode where players on opposite teams compete to capture as many posts as possible before the set time runs out.

Team-Elimination is a player team competition, and Elimination is a player free-for-all mode. With no allies at your aspect, the one factor you possibly can belief is your instincts. Combining a gripping single-player marketing campaign and intense multiplayer modes with help for as much as 16 gamers on-line, Lost Planet is an epic gaming masterpiece.

Monumental world maps unfold as gamers battle throughout huge snow fields and abandoned cities both on foot or in armed, robotic Important Fits. Free download games via torrent or direct links. Username or Email Address. Remember Me. To use social login you have to agree with the storage and handling of your data by this website.



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