I feel like I'm the only person in the world who likes this series. All my friends who play games have no clue about these and not even one of the giantbomb guys likes this series. I hear everybody hating on them cause of the difficulty and trial and error. I feel so alone...
Splinter Cell
Tom Clancy's tactical espionage series starring Sam Fisher.
I feel like I'm the only person who enjoys this series
I feel like I'm the only person in the world who likes this series. All my friends who play games have no clue about these and not even one of the giantbomb guys likes this series. I hear everybody hating on them cause of the difficulty and trial and error. I feel so alone...
" I bet Tom Clancy likes the splinter cell series. "I feel more like he doesn't give a shit about it. He wrote none of the books or game scripts but got plenty of money off them.
i was seconds away from buying Pandora Tomorrow a loooooong time ago, but i bought Burnout Revenge instead.
at this point, it seems like a hassle to track down all previous entries in the series and play them.. which is a shame because at some point i had interest in the series.
Played Double Agent and couldn't have hated it more, never played another one since because of the past taste that game left in my mouth
= D
" Played Double Agent and couldn't have hated it more, never played another one since because of the past taste that game left in my mouth = D "I also did not enjoy double agent on the 360. But the original xbox version (see picture) I really enjoyed way too much
The real question is why do you have two copies of Double Agent?
I liked Splinter Cell as well though. Have played and beaten all of them. I really liked Double Agent, not sure why some people are hating on it.
I like splinter cell games, way more than metal gear games because your getting authentic stealth and not fake stealth with action. Of course splinter cell conviction is different however I like the series. Even sam fisher takes the same martial arts I do, I know he's for real and based on real world stuff.
" For me the series peaked with Chaos Theory. Loved it. After that one I havent even played the full versions anymore. Conviction was just so "streamlined" it didnt feel like a splinter cell game anymore. "Chaos Theory was the closest thing to a perfect game for me.
" The real question is why do you have two copies of Double Agent? I liked Splinter Cell as well though. Have played and beaten all of them. I really liked Double Agent, not sure why some people are hating on it. "the top one is the x360 version LOL
" @Linkin10362 said:Ah, since I couldn't see the top I just assumed it was another xbox one." The real question is why do you have two copies of Double Agent? I liked Splinter Cell as well though. Have played and beaten all of them. I really liked Double Agent, not sure why some people are hating on it. "the top one is the x360 version LOL "
Chaos Theory is one of my favourite games from the last generation. I never played Double Agent and Conviction didn't do much for me (I still liked it, but Chaos Theory is a very hard act to follow, especially with the changes made to Conviction's mechanics), but I still love the franchise as a whole. It's hard to find pure stealth games anymore, unfortunately.
Oh lordy where to begin?
Okay, guess what? You're not the only person who loves this series. It may not be the biggest game franchises in existence, but it is still very popular. The only reason there have been so many games in this series is because people buy them and enjoy them. Also, your group of friends makes up a tiny, TINY portion of the general populace.
Example: I own Dragon Quest IX. None of my friends own Dragon Quest IX. This does not mean I am the only person who has bought Dragon Quest IX.
Conviction was fun, but I don't know... it didn't really feel like Splinter Cell. Sam kinda reminded me of Jack Bauer.
I think it's a pretty great series. I still need to try out Splinter Cell: Conviction. I definitely look forward to playing that one.
Only one I haven't played was Chaos Theory. Guess I should get on that. I remember seeing the original at a friends house and thinking that it was too slow paced and more of a exercise in patience while you waited for passing guards to get right where you wanted them, which was true for a good deal of the first game. I eventually picked up the game cheap for the gamecube and found myself enjoying it quite a bit especially the missions where you could go balls to the wall and kill everyone, since they were rare in the first games. Double Agent really did seem to be a low point in the single player department but it's multiplayer was fun once you figured it out. My roommate and I would quote the lines from the beginning of the matches rather often "your mission is to infiltrate the enemy compound and extract the information from the terminals" or "The green terminal is under attack!". Conviction was definitely a change where you almost never had to be stealthy if you had a good trigger finger and precision but also a rather enjoyable co-op and multiplayer.
I was probably the only one of my group of friends that liked the series, I have all 5 games. Unfortunately that series started losing me after Double Agent, it was no longer about stopping the terrorists but rather about some personal vendetta Sam had throughout Conviction. Maybe the series needs to focus on a new Third Echelon agent, lets face it Michael Ironside isn't as a good as what he use to be.
That series wouldn't be as well-known as it is without having quite a lot of people playing it. I've never really been a fan of stealth games because of the whole trial-and-error style that they use and the general pacing, however I have played a fair amount of Splinter Cell: Conviction with one of my friends and I have to say that's an enjoyable game.
You know... I own everything there, minus Conviction, plus two novels.
I have very different sentiments regarding each game, but I think I respect the original and Pandora Tomorrow the most -- in the sense that they didn't even care about the levels of demanding and retrial they required. They (Or at least the first) also had a really good spy intrigue to them, and it generally wasn't overblown.
But with Conviction gutting the existing story and characters, I lost just about all previously acquired attachment to Chaos Theory and up, as those games stand together, in a way.
Long story short: I miss the days when you actually had to find a keycode, or drag a guy to a retinal scanner. And if you didn't? MISSION OVER.
I got a lot more joy from the meticulous gameplay of Chaos theory than the more recent action oriented games such as Double Agent and Conviction. Can anbody recommend any stealth games that are like how Chaos theory was, i.e. slower paced and about being stealthy and not just killing? I'm on the PS3 and I enjoyed MGS4, but I still shot far too many people to regard it as purely stealthy.
I'm a big fan of the series. Played everything except the new one, and yes, both versions of Double Agent and the 360 version isn't the best one. Here's an entry from my gaming diary:
Splinter Cell: Pandora Tomorrow finished Sat Morn 25th of March 06.
Played it on normal and after the first one it felt like a day out shopping. I still enjoyed it, and there was far less of the dying again and again and again on the same bit, apart from the very last bit where I was first of all drunk and kept falling down the lift shaft
"Fisher, the lift's stopped" - "Thank's Lambert." if I have to hear that again - CHRIST!
And then I couldn't suss out what the fuck to do in the room with the catwalks, and didn't realise the timedown was to get to the medicine, not Soth running away. Once I nuked them all with a gas grenade, then went straight to the pox box and it fucking ended the level with a fail and told me to hide the fucking bodies! All I had to do was kill the sleeping fuckers, but why didn't Lambert say that to me instead of being a toasted cunt with cheese and pickle.
It didn't take too long to complete, and I pined for it straight away after finishing it. I didn't want to move onto Chaos Theory straight away in case I got Zelda Fatigue. I'll play it again on hard one day. For £1.25 it's not worth
getting rid of, and maybe I can play it online sometime soon when I use my trial card.
Technically I actually didn't see any improvements over the first. If anything there were less lighting effects, or I've already become used to them. There was far less camera avoidance, too, and I don't think I used a disposable pick once. Bits where you had to use a pick in the first because that's all the time you had were great tension builders. Actually thinking about it, when you're in the grass in the one jungle bit that is fucking lovely.
It will need reviewing again when played on hard but:
Bad Bits:
* Soth on the train after the conversation. It seemed like going back to his room was sensible, not just hiding like a little chicken.
* Realising what the hell was happening on the last bit - climbing those fucking rods!
* Still takes fucking AGES to smack people in the chops with his elbow
* Standing up while running - you have to pause
* Pointless hanging and shooting move seen only once during training
* Sam looks better in cgi bits in the first one
I'm a big fan of the series with chaos theory being my favorite. But the recent one kinda let me down, it was good but there were a lot of bugs for me and after beating it twice on hard I still didn't get the achievement. Five games in I guess the series is starting to get stale.
Until he disappeared from GB, I was working on a podcast for Splinter Cell: Conviction with End_Boss and another duder (that never got published because he never sent us the friggin file before he vanished). I've been a fan of the Splinter Cell series ever since the first one came out, and IMO Chaos Theory was the peak of the series. I would still recommend it today to anyone who wants to play it for the first time.
Personally, I hated Double Agent simply because it claimed it would give you a choice in how to play the story but the game took away all that choice and gave you the same "twists" you could find in an episode of 24. Also, it gave you the exact same gear you had as an NSA agent with no explanation, even though you were working with a terrorist group. Not to mention they just watered-down everything I loved about the multiplayer. Conviction was a better on this, but the multiplayer felt more like more of the same from Rainbow Six Vegas 2 except you could only play with 2 people and some stealth elements were tacked on to make it seem "new." Still, snapping necks and shooting chandeliers onto people never gets old.
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