It's basically just Virtual Pool 2 with a handful of enhancements.
It's boring, it's unoriginal, and it doesn't even live up to the eight-year-old game it's attempting to copy.
Its technical problems are a real shame, because when it comes to every other aspect of game design, Y2K is actually quite good.
It's clearly the best traditional computer role-playing game of the year and is bound to be an all-time favorite for many of its inevitable fans.
Earthworm Jim 3D has something to discourage all types of people from playing it.
FreeSpace 2 is one of the best space sims ever made and is a solid candidate for game of the year.
Starfleet Command is undoubtedly the best combat-oriented Trek game yet.
RC is a genre-bending title that's well worth checking out.
Even with its problems, its excellent combat system and sense of style make Jagged Alliance 2 very easy to recommend.
Whether the prerelease infamy and the embarrassment of disclaimers are a result of the current political climate or conscious hyperbole by the Interplay marketing machine, they tend to overshadow what ...
It improves in almost every conceivable way on its predecessors and reestablishes the series as the premier example of the play style it single-handedly pioneered.
The real shame of it is there is a fine, fine flight simulator at the core of Aggressor.
Baseball Edition 2000 is more of a "my favorite team just got whipped in real life so I think I'll take out my aggressions on the computer's weak AI" sort ...
Baseball 2000 feels, plays, and looks just the way its name sounds: generic.
What begins as an interesting tale of conspiracy and murder ends up a confused and confusing gore fest of the not-so-supernatural.
Blood & Magic's basic premise is entertaining enough that die-hard strategy fanatics may be able to overlook its interface problems.
I thought Bridge Deluxe II would be a great way to start learning bridge. It's not.
This is an OK game with a fair amount of gameplay - if you like puzzle games.
Fans of the Bust-A-Move puzzle series can look forward to more sleepless months with Natsume's release of Bust-A-Move 4.
Caesars Palace is an adequate adaptation of casino gambling.
Carmageddon is visceral, violent, vehicular fun.
The player spends a lot of time shuttling Casper through places he's already been, looking for the one doorway or vent he missed.
ClayFighter 63 1/3 goes right back to boring players to tears.
Interplay has managed to combine top-notch graphics, sound, and gameplay with a detailed historical framework to create a title that is both addictive and entertaining.
If you missed Conquest the first time around, don't miss it now.
The game puts you behind the wheel of an ammo-decked patrol car, motorcycle, or wing vehicle to fight crime and annihilate anything that gets in your way as you do ...
He may have been unconscious for three years, but Zak has not lost a step.
No exploding body parts or fireball-vomiting demons here--Descent puts an industrial spin on the genre by taking you into the bowels of huge factory-like space stations to fight mining robots ...
If you don't like Descent at least a little bit, make no mistake, there is something wrong with you.
The end result is a classic case of too little too late.
How could the company that produced Fallout also be responsible for one of the lousiest games to come down the pike in quite a while?
It's a noble effort to both cannibalize the best elements of classics of the genre and also provide a number of refreshing innovations.
Die by the Sword goes well beyond its almost admirably typical premise to deliver a visually stunning, terribly challenging, and often awe-inspiring dungeon hack.
Despite Disruptor's lack of ambition, first-person shooter fans will enjoy its fast-paced action.
It's the kind of game that titles like Eidos' Deathtrap Dungeon and Universal's Xena: Warrior Princess should have been.
Interplay did its best with the lemon of a game it licensed.
Dragon Lore II is about as frustrating a gaming experience as I have encountered in recent years.
Created very much with its ‘80s ancestor in mind, the fantasy world of Dungeon Master II is complete, well-structured...and slooooww.
Use your keyboard!
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