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    Far Cry 2

    Game » consists of 16 releases. Released Oct 21, 2008

    The sequel to the original Far Cry dispenses with Jack Carver, and moves the action to a war-consumed Africa complete with an open-ended storyline involving civil war, several hours of missions, heated gunplay, and a slew of dynamic elements powered by a new engine.

    DELETE_darkfox's Far Cry 2 (PC) review

    Avatar image for DELETE_darkfox

    Welcome to the Savannah with no tropic island insight.

    For anyone who played the original Far Cry or the enhanced versions on the xbox, Far Cry 2 will not feel like the same game. For one thing the protagonist is no longer Jack Carver but a choice of a few male and female characters to play as. Gone are the tropical palm trees and islands surrounded by water. You're in  the Savannah where there is nothing but mountains, grassy plains and sand. There is no sci-fi twists where you change into a viscious predator. This time you play as a mercenary sent into a fictionous African nation to hunt down one target. He calls himself the Jackal, arming both factions at war, the APR and the UFLL and it's up to you to hunt him down and put an end to these mercenary wars.


    Far Cry 2 is best desribed as an open world FPS where the story is more mission based. You accept missions from either faction and go to a certain point on your map to complete it. Most of the times the mission will be assassinating a target or retrieving documents or blowing up something to aid the faction. Along the way you meet up with buddies that will call as soon as you receive a mission and ask you to go to a different point on the map which may actually  aid you on the mission. Personally the story is not the strongest element of the game and the missions can get a bit repetitive. The story doesn't progress fast enough to keep you till the end and it seems the Jackal is the only one consistent story element. 

    As a far as the shooting elements go this is a great shooter. There are a tonne of guns that you can either pickup from fallen enemies or buy from your local merchant as long as you unlocked them. Enemy guns are much weaker than store guns, they jam easily, will break and definately have a rusted look to them. Driving through the Savannah can be cool as long as you have the patience because the map size is atleast 50 square kilometres. It's quite incredible really that the Dunia engine can seamlessly load all that terrain and the engine is also well optimized for mid-range PCs.

    This would definately have to be one of the most visially stunning games to hit the PC and consoles. Character models look good, the environment looks great with the HDR lighting and the jungle looks great too with the shadows of the tree tops. Sound is of course great with gunfights and explosions coming out of your 5.1 sound system. Voice acting is top notch especially for characters like the Jackal and also the South African accents are very well pulled off. And what would a Far Cry game be like without map editior. If you loved creating maps for the other games of the series than you will love it again as it's great to create a map, customize as much of it as you want and then share it.

    This is definately a title you should consider adding to your collection. The full price can only be justified by how much you loved the map editing and the multiplayer but other than that a price drop should definately have you consider this a purchase. Curious where the next Far Cry location will be set, perhaps middle east?

    Other reviews for Far Cry 2 (PC)

      I had mixed reaction after finishing Far Cry 2 but... 0

        "Somewhere out there is an arms dealer known only as the Jackal," the game tells you, by way of a send-off. "He has been selling guns to both the UFLL and the APR. Every gun, every bullet, and every corpse you have seen can be traced back to him." The dynamic paragraph breaks, and then - "Find him and kill him." This is how you start your journey of FarCry 2 in the middle of Africa. You get the gist of the current political situations by the taxi driver who picks you up after landing in ...

      1 out of 2 found this review helpful.

      Far Cry 2 0

      Crytek, the developer of the first game in the series, went on from that to make Crysis, while the rights to the series stayed with publisher Ubisoft, who gave the sequel to one of their internal teams. Thanks to this, Far Cry 2 doesn't have a lot in common with the original besides shooting people in a jungle environment. I only played a bit of the first game, but basically you were a guy named Jack shooting his way through a linear story, albeit with some freedom in how you went about doing th...

      1 out of 2 found this review helpful.

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