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Total number of titles: 1814


Page number: 18
 

 

Q*bert

Platform: Atari 5200
Publisher:
Genre:
My Rating:   Rated:
Condition: Cart only
Edition: Summary:


 

Quackshot starring Donald Duck

Platform: Sega Genesis
Publisher: SEGA
Genre: 2D Platformer
My Rating:   Rated:
Condition: Complete
Edition: Summary: I've finally won the game after so many years of play. It's fun and has great music for a sega game. Enjoy.


 

Quake 4

Platform: Xbox 360
Publisher: Activision
Genre: First-Person Shooter
My Rating:   Rated: Mature
Condition: Complete
Edition: Summary: Quake 4 takes you back to the front as you fight against an unrelenting alien enemy. Armed with advanced weaponry and vehicles and aided by an elite squad of marines, you take the battle to the heart of the Strogg home planet and become Earth's only hope for victory. They're regrouping but with their planetary defenses ruined, you have a chance to deliver a full and final assault. You are Matthew Kane, an elite member of Rhino Squad, and part of Earth's next invasion wave. With the Makron assumed dead, your squad is taking part in an operation to take advantage of the disarray and mop up the rest of the enemy forces on the Strogg planet. But your drop ship gets hit and comes down hard, killing a large chunk of your squadmates at the opening of the game. From there, you'll pull yourself up out of the muck and get down to business.


 

Quake II

Platform: Nintendo 64
Publisher: Activision
Genre: First-Person Shooter
My Rating:   Rated: Mature
Condition: Cart only
Edition: Summary: Be all you can be: become a Space Marine, and save the world. Quake II places you in the role of a generic Marine, the sole survivor of a last-ditch assault force sent against the Strogg's mysterious alien home world. Starting your mission with only a pistol, you'll eventually scavenge much more impressive weaponry from those less fortunate squad mates who didn't quite make it. Action fans will relish the BFG's (game manual's definition is "big, uh, freakin' gun") massive room-clearing discharge, while snipers will delight in the electromagnetic railgun's precise, devastating blast. You get to use these toys on all manner of nightmarish creatures, most of them cobbled together from the remains of your former comrades. In one of the game's least pleasant scenes, you fight your way through the bloody factory that assembles the piecemeal horrors./ Of course, if you're feeling a little more social, you can put off saving the world and opt for Quake II's multiplayer mode, which allows one, two, or three additional players to join in the action. There are four setups for the multiplayer mode, ranging from the standard everyone-for-themselves mode to capture the flag./ This first-person shooter has great graphics and sound that match the mood and fast-paced action of the game. Moreover, each level is unique and some are very large, resulting in a lack of monotony and great replay value. If you can take the intensity of the game's unrestricted violence, you'll enjoy the rich gameplay of Quake II. --Hugh Arnold/ Pros:/ • Vivid graphics/ • Multiplayer modes/ • Fantastic level, monster, and weapon design/ • Replay value/ Cons:/ • Extreme violence/ • Threadbare plot/ • Viewing toggle scrolls at high rate/


 

Quake III Arena

Platform: Sega Dreamcast
Publisher:
Genre: First-Person Shooter
My Rating:   Rated: Mature
Condition: Disc only
Edition: Summary: For those of you who are unfamiliar with the "Quake" series, the popular PC game puts players in a violent world in which the point is to collect weapons and kill as many opponents as you can. While not without its flaws, "Quake III Arena" goes well beyond just mimicking this experience for Dreamcast users. It's the best PC-to-console port yet.
"Quake III Arena" is the first title to allow multiplayer, real-time networked gaming between Dreamcast and PC players. Hooking up through the SegaNet servers, players can go online and shoot it out with other people around the world for the first time in console history. (We played with a keyboard and a mouse--the only way "Quake III" should ever be played--and with them we exacted my punishment on more than just a few unsuspecting patrons.)
A full slate of 25 nasty warriors has been rolled out for the Dreamcast game. The weapons--which range from shotguns and rocket launchers to lightning guns and plasma guns--and effects also are packed in tighter than Charlie Tuna in his can. It also has all of the nifty springboards, quad damage, space-age dungeons, and everything that we loved about our favorite shooter on the PC.
The Dreamcast version has a large variety of gameplay options, including single player, free-for-all, tournament, team deathmatch, and capture the flag, most of which are open for play in two-to-four-player split-screen mode. The game's rendering engine achieves smooth and realistic texturing, and stunning environmental effects. The environments in particular are great, with dazzling sky textures leading the way. Also, the geometry and large, detailed textures of the character models make them the envy of the console world.
The character's movements in "Quake III Arena" didn't feel nearly as smooth as in the PC version, because of a rather slow framerate. Compared to the PC version, this one makes you feel like you're battling with one leg in concrete. While it's good for console and ambitious even for the Dreamcast processor, you find yourself losing targets that you feel you should track with no problem. One can forgive "Quake III Arena" if at the end of the day you have something good to play online. With "Quake III Arena", something good this way comes. "--Todd Mowatt"
Pros: Multiplayer, real-time networked gaming between Dreamcast and PC players Smooth and realistic texturing, and stunning environmental effects Cons: Sluggish framerate


 

Quantum Redshift

Platform: Xbox
Publisher: Microsoft
Genre: Racing
My Rating:   Rated: Teen
Condition:
Edition: Summary: Cross a hovercraft, spaceship, tank and drag bike and you get one extreme racing machine. Now you can get behind the wheel of one of these machines and race down futuristic tracks while fighting off other racers with powerful weaponry. You'll need to use both your racing skills and your combat abilities in order to achieve the ultimate victory. Pilot these hover vehicles at unbelievable speeds up to 900 miles per hour over awesome terrain.


 

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