Warhammer 40k fire warrior safe pc download
The road to becoming a fully-fledged Warhammer fanatic is long, expensive and arduous. The Cult Of Games Workshop not only requires its acolytes to devour and eventually regurgitate its many rule-sets, but to buy and lovingly paint hundreds of lead figures before war across the bedroom carpet can even begin.
It takes more than a subscription to White Dwarf magazine and a proficiency in the art of drybrushing to get into the inner circle.
High priests in waiting must become one with all of the GW realms, they must befriend the hardcore regulars at their local GW temple and cultivate a liking for metal in all its musical and physical forms.
And for your utter devotion you will be forever rewarded with the Curse Of Nurgle' - bubbling acne and the lingering pong of Cheesy Wotsits and white spirits that will shadow you to your doom.
Crudely daubed in acrylics and tissue-wrapped, my own collection of miniatures rests peacefully in dog-eared boxes somewhere in the loft - never to see the light again. I was one of the lucky ones, I managed to get out long before acquinng the cheese-ball whiff and an ear for Napalm Death. But the pull of Warhammer is still strong despite being clean for a decade.
Faced with the prospect of playing Fire Warrior, I honestly feared that it would turn me back down the dark path. Curiously, rather than focusing its attentions on the genetically-altered heroes of the Imperial Space Marines, the game casts you as Kais, a fledgling Tau soldier of the Fire Warriors caste about to undergo on-the-job training. The first mission is to spring a high-ranking agent from an Impenal pnson, but over the course of 20 missions it becomes clear that it is the entire Tau race that needs liberating, as ever, from the boundless clutches of the hateful Imperium.
Yep, it's one-man-army-saves-galaxy-despite-insurmountable-odds time again. While the aim of the game is obvious, the storyline does try to twist the plot, at least enough to bring in various enemy units to battle. Impenal troops. Space Marines, a Dreadnought and even the omnipresent Chaos legions turn up at various points, all of which will please the Warhammer faithful no end, seeing as they've never been given the 3D game treatment before.
Just as pleasing for the same reason are some of the maps; burning Predator tanks lay scuppered in desolate trenches, while later on you get to stalk the corridors of an Imperial Battleship. The weapons too are faithfully recreated, from las-guns, blowtorch-style melta-guns, all the way to bolters and a missile launcher -plus a couple of fixed cannons for good measure. Unfortunately, while the weapons look convincing enough to please the Warhammer faithful, FPS veterans with not a care for the licence will find most of them lacking real punch and, early on especially, rather flimsy and ineffectual.
Even when you get the chance to pick up a new weapon there is always something faulty; the Mstyle machine gun, for example, has a muzzle flash that practically whites-out most of the screen. Thankfully, rather than having to rely solely on your arsenal of weapons, you do at least occasionally find yourself fighting alongside other Tau Fire Warriors, some of whom lay down suppressive fire, while others must be protected while they open locked doors. Regardless, all without exception die within 20 seconds of you meeting them.
Without wanting to appear elitist, the problem with Fire Warrior is that it was designed from the outset as a console shooter. The levels are linear and tight and almost exclusively set through corridors or trenches. As a result, combat is gratifyingly intense, if somewhat samey. The 3D engine provides for a decent level of detail on some of the characters too, but against this are the common problems that blight many a console shooter: dead bodies that fade away, a complete lack of scenery interaction, no shadow effects and some shockingly basic character animation.
Worst of all the console hang-ups is the Al, which is predictable and slow to react, as if the game still thinks you are playing with a joypad. For Warhammer 40, Fire Warrior, we have the following files:. MyAbandonware More than old games to download for free! Browse By Developer Kuju Entertainment Ltd. Perspective 1st-Person. Buy Game GOG. Captures and Snapshots Windows.
Write a comment Share your gamer memories, give useful links or comment anything you'd like. The grunt soldiers just charge and kneel right in front of you, and shoot with an accuracy that makes Stormtroopers look like marksmen. There's also a severe lack of variety of enemy units. In some games, this makes sense -- in a World War II shooter you're going to fight Germans, so you expect a bit of unit monotony. But the Warhammer 40K universe is teeming with creatures, and yet in each mission you'll face the same two or three enemy types from start to finish.
It gets old after a while. Speaking of getting old, the weapons are severely lacking. The Tau guns are very bland, and even the Imperial weaponry that you pick up lacks the same punch as the weapons in a game like Halo. While this is being true to Warhammer 40K, it doesn't change the fact that in a shooter you want to play with new toys after a while; going through several levels using the same pea-shooter isn't a lot of fun.
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Sicherheit und Zufriedenheit. Warhammer 40, Fire Warrior. Discover the grim dark universes of Warhammer where there is only war.
Welcome to the dark nightmare future of the 41st millennium, the grim era of the Imperium. The battlefield is spread acro Details zum Produkt. Empfohlene Systemanforderungen:. Shooter - Egoperspektive - Science-Fiction.
Forum zum Spiel. Ein Fehler ist aufgetreten.
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