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F.E.A.R.: First Encounter Assault Recon | 
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| From: Sierra Category: Video Games
List Price: $19.99 Buy Used: $5.65 You Save: $14.34 (72%)
New (16) Used (27) from $5.65
Rating: 168 reviews Sales Rank: 4805
Platforms: Windows Xp, Windows 2000 Genre: Action Games ESRB: Mature Media: CD-ROM Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Number Of Items: 1 Batteries Included: No Age: 17 - 20 years Operating System: Windows 2000 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 7.6 x 5.3 x 1.4
MPN: 82394 Model: 72092 UPC: 020626720922 EAN: 0020626720922 ASIN: B0000ZUGZ4
Release Date: October 18, 2005 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Hyper Stylized FPS Action | | • | Supernatural Storyline | | • | Larger-than-life enemies | | • | Advanced Graphics-Cinematic Special Effects | | • | Multi-Player Action |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description F.E.A.R. (First Encounter Assault Recon) is an intense combat experience with rich atmosphere and a deeply intense paranormal storyline presented entirely in first person. Be the hero in your own spine-tingling epic of action, tension, and terror? and discover the true meaning of fear. An unidentified paramilitary force infiltrates a multi-billion dollar aerospace compound, taking hostages but issuing no demands. A Special Forces team is sent in by the government to contain the situation, but contact is severed as an eerie signal interrupts radio communications. When the interference subsides moments later, the team has been obliterated. Live footage of the massacre shows an inexplicable wave of destruction tearing the soldiers apart before they can even react. In light of the desperate situation the F.E.A.R. team is assembled. As part of this elite classified strike team created to deal with the most unusual and shocking of threats your mission is simple: Eliminate the intruders at any cost. Determine the origin of the signal. And contain this crisis before it spirals out of control. Requirements - US version of Windows 2000/XPwith latest service pack installed / DirectX 9.0c or higher / PC with Intel Pentium 4 1.7 GHz or equivalent / 512MB RAM / 64MB DirectX 9.0 compliant video card with pixel shader support
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| Customer Reviews: Read 163 more reviews...
Great action game. November 1, 2008 LEDUYNHUT This game is spooky and creepy but also filled with action.I think this combination works well.The game should only be played on the two highest difficulties or with slomo off in the lower difficulties.
Remember, its just a game! September 28, 2008 R C Stryker (Wilmington NC) I bought this game used thinking it was going to be your run of the mill shoot `em up game and the first thing that got me was the blood and guts in this game. This game is not for the weak at heart and even if you are playing in GOD MODE, it's more of a physiological thriller than a game. In the game you are the newbie on the team and they throw you in to hunt down this guy who controls a cloned army with his mind, and to top it off he is a cannibal. From the very beginning he starts playing with your mind and the ending of this first part is simply mind blowing, where you are no longer fighting bad guys, but ghosts and every other scene is a physiological mind screw where you have to keep on telling yourself, its only a game...its only a game. I have seen horror movies that didn't scare me as much as this game did. I've yet to play the two expansion packs and I do not know if I can. The graphics are good, and the better your card the better the game will look. Expect a lot of blood, swears, and sneak attacks. I ran this game on my laptop and it ran ok, at certain point it was choppy but it was minimal or and considering that I have an ATI READEON Mobility 300 built in card it ran fantastic. For entertainment value I gave it 3 stars because it runs more like a horror movie than a game. Overall 4 stars based on the story and game play. Remember, its only a game.
Tense, creepy, and great fun, but a little on the short side. August 28, 2008 Yasue Bailey (Japan) Combine the tense military fire-fights of games like Half-Life with the creepy atmosphere of the best Japanese horror films, and you get F.E.A.R. The only real gripe I have with it is the length. I fully expected to spend a good month or so going through the game (at about an hour a day), but ended up completing the game on the regular difficulty in just over a week. Everything else about the game is excellent. The debris and gun smoke obscuring the battlefield, the wickedly designed enemy AI (IMO, the best in any FPS game yet), and the well-designed weapons all make for an incredibly satisfying shooter. The little girl ghost will make even the most hardened horror veteran check the dark corners of their home and shut the closet door before going to sleep. The multi-player mode of the game does not include any of the horror elements from the game, unfortunately. Despite representing only one side of the game, I found the deathmatch levels to be quite well designed, and the pace fast and furious. A downside to multi-player mode is that it REALLY takes a lot out of your system. I'm running a 3.2 GHz CPU with 1 GB RAM and a GeForce 7600GT, and multiplayer COOKS my system. If I play too many consecutive rounds, my PC is so overheated that the game hangs between maps.
Be Afraid...Be Kind Of Afraid... August 19, 2008 Voice_in_the_Liar Like so many games, this game did not live up to the hype surrounding it. It's not a bad game, and at times it can be quite enjoyable (it kept me interested enough so that I played through the whole game). However, there are several major flaws that seriously hamper what could have been one of the best shooters of 2005. 1. There's not enough variety. It's pretty much the same eerily lighted corridors teeming with the same enemies shooting you with the same weapons. After the first two hours or so, I stopped being impressed. 2. Some boxes fall of a shelf and my radio transmitter begins to fade in and out and I'm supposed to be scared? I knew what to expect after the first hour. There are a few good scares, but mostly it falls flat. 3. There's really not a whole lot of strategy to the gameplay. I know, I know. It's a First Person Shooter and it's supposed to be mindless, b@lls-to-the-wall action. But even these aren't that difficult. The A.I. is great, but the slow-mo (while awesome) makes these battle a little too easy. It gets a little (not too much though) tedious. Not a bad game, overall. Just not the one people have been raving about. But for 10 bucks, why not try it out?
FEAR Alma - but not this game August 5, 2008 schulni (Oakland, CA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
FEAR is a good, not great, game. It suffers from a kind of triage - it seems that the developers did not have the resources to make every aspect of the game great, so rather than making everything just ok, they decided to allocate all of their resources to certain parts of the game. That manifests itself in a few ways, but the basic breakdown is this: the AI and gameplay are excellent, but they are also repetitive, and the game actually gets easier as it goes on. By the end, you have so much "slo-mo" (ala Max Payne Matrix-esque bullet time), such powerful weapons, and so much health, it is unlikely you will have to load any given area more than once or twice. With the exception of the last two brief levels, the enemies at the end of the game are virtually the same as at the beginning - only now you have massive firepower and practically unlimited slo-mo to combat their basic machineguns. If you enjoy Far Cry/Crysis type games, odds are you are going to have an adjustment period to FEAR. The entire game basically takes place in narrow corridors that lead to larger rooms - sure, there are three slightly different buildings, you go out onto a roof a couple of times, and you might go through an air duct, climb a ladder, or solve a simple puzzle, but basically it's a game with little in the way of variety. The thing is, though, that given all this, FEAR still manages to be a fun, well-made game. No two firefights are completely identical, and the AI is so absurdly good (strategically), that you'll probably find yourself hooked. There is a decent mix of sniping, stealth, and all-out running and gunning, and the enemies do keep you on your toes, even if there are only six basic types, four of which barely appear: soldiers, bots, flying bots, turrets, chameleons (fast moving melee attacks that blend into their environment) and ghosts. Of those six, soldiers make up about 85% of the enemies you'll face. But like I mentioned, those soldiers coordinate their attacks well and keep you on your toes. FEAR does try to add a horror aspect, but it does it in the vein of Max Payne interactive cutscenes. Unlike Doom 3, for instance, when FEAR gets spooky, you can just run forward for awhile and be reasonably assured of nothing happening to you. You'll fight a couple of battles, then the lights will flicker and you'll see some apparitions, but if you keep progressing, everything will be back to normal without any real frights. This isn't necessarily a bad thing, but just don't expect to jump out of your seat often. It's more the creepy variety of horror. The last couple of levels are legitimately scary, and will keep you on the edge of your seat, but I won't spoil those. In terms of FEAR's fundamentals, it's a solid game. The controls are straightforward (though I found some jerkiness in the first few levels for some reason), and by now you don't need a top of the line computer to run the game. The graphics are still relatively current, but given the simplicity of the environments, that's not hard to do. The weapons are decent and fairly realistic; they aren't very interesting and they become overpowered, though. As I've mentioned, by the middle of the game, you can carry the three most powerful weapons (particle weapon, repeating cannon, and rocket launcher) and kill most soldiers with only one shot. Grenades are mixed in well, which I like, since they add variety to otherwise repetitive battles. There aren't any bosses - the game is actually really realistic despite the paranormal absurdity of its plot. Overall, this game is definitely worth playing. It does several things extremely well, and will at the very least entertain. If you enjoy its strengths, then you'll love it. If you are more into an open-ended, expansive shooter than FEAR might not be for you.
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