Alien vs predator 2 full movie free download






















Share your gamer memories, help others to run the game or comment anything you'd like. If you have trouble to run Aliens Versus Predator 2 Windows , read the abandonware guide first! We may have multiple downloads for few games when different versions are available.

Also, we try to upload manuals and extra documentations when possible. If the manual is missing and you own the original manual, please contact us! Various files to help you run Aliens Versus Predator 2, apply patches, fixes, maps or miscellaneous utilities. It's one thing being frightened by a game when playing it singleplayer, and a whole different thing when you're playing online against a bunch of jumped-up selfobsessed gits, intent on insulting you unless you play the game exactly how they demand.

AvP2s no exception. And while its online game types are highly varied, and for the most part extremely entertaining and tense, it's nothing short of baffling not to mention off-putting when somone starts having a go at you for remaining cloaked when playing as a Predator.

Surely that's the point of playing as one, utilising stealth, thermal imaging and infrared view modes along with an array of long-distance weaponry to take out your opponents. This style of play works best in AvP2 Hunt mode, where a set number of Predators take on a higher ratio of marines. However, once a Predator is taken down, he and his assailant swap places.

And you can only score points as a Predator. Hunt is best played on the larger, erratically lit levels, and playing as a marine can become incredibly tense as you mistake friendly blips on your motion sensor for the enemy and start firing wildly into the night. Contrary to popular belief, if you look carefully enough you can often spot a cloaked Predator fairly easily, but holding your nerve as you desperately try to take them down is a totally separate challenge.

Playing as an outnumbered Predator is even more enjoyable, as you're required to think tactically if you're to survive, especially against some of the well-organised teams of marines I came across online.

DM and TDM games vary in quality, and rarely work as well when there are three sides marine, Alien and Predator , providing far more satisfaction when two races go at it. Surprisingly, Aliens often appeared to have the edge over the other two, as well-organised groups of drones would literally scythe throughthe opposition, utilising their sheer speed and agility wallwalking is an invaluable skill to master , while their pounce attacks seem a little too powerful.

Perhaps some further balancing is required to even things out. Survivor and Overrun games are rare, but often entertaining. The first is ultimately a lastman-standing competition, while the latter is a team based round-game not too dissimilar to Counter-Strike, where races must annihilate the opposition in order to score a point.

However, both seem to wane in interest fairly quickly not helped by the dearth of servers , and it struck me as surprising that the excellent Evac games marines must get to a dropship, aliens must stopthem , rarely had more than one server running it at a time.

There are unfortunately two concerns which blight this otherwise entertaining online shooter. Firstly, lag. Even with an ADSL connection this proves troublesome and makes closeup combat virtually impossible for anyone still chugging away on a 56K modem. The second problem lies with the small choice of maps, which are for the most part, fairly uninspiring. It's unlikely AvP2 will challenge Counter-Strike as the king of online shooters, as its complex, tactical nature will put many casual gamers off.

But there's plenty of variety on offer, and you'll soon find yourself carried away by the tension of it as you sneak up behind someone, and vindicate your playing style by ripping their head off with a well-placed wrist blade swipe. Download AVP: Alien vs.

Predator Movie, Click Here! Directed By : Paul W. Predator 3d AVP: Alien vs. A little disappointingly, enemies do tend to see you if even if you're hanging from the ceiling in a dark corner - in single player, at least.

Multiplayer is a different story, since human players actually have to remember to look up. Unlike the previous game or the Aliens movie, Aliens vs Predator 2 doesn't solely take place in the corridors of a deserted colony or an Alien hive. True, you do get to visit those locations, but you also get to wander around alien jungles as the Predator or through the corridors of the research complex and pods as all three species.

The level design is pretty damn good and convincing. In fact, the game has a lot in common with the Aliens comics, which often centre around the dodgy activities of those attempting to exploit the Alien as a bio-weapon.

Such attempts usually end in tears and much tearing of flesh and Aliens vs Predator 2 is no different. All of this interspecies warfare looks superb, even on a modest Geforce2 MX; turn the detail levels lower, and the game will even run at a decent framerate on lower level PCs - we reached playable speeds on a PII But hey, when you're desperately backpedalling away from a horde of Aliens, you likely won't be admiring the texturing on the walls or your foes.

And believe me, you will be doing a fair bit of running in this game. Aliens vs Predator 2 has to be the scariest game I've played in ages - the programmers have gone out of their way to shock you at every opportunity. And when you're not being shocked, there's the almost unbearably enduring fear that something's about to come around the corner and take your head off.

The atmosphere in Aliens vs Predator 2 is so thick, you could cut it with a chainsaw. Granted, most of the occurrences in the game are scripted and the enemy AI really does very little, but it adds tremendously to the atmosphere to be standing around a corner or crawling through a vent and hear characters nearby crying, "Oh god, oh god" when they catch sight of you.

Or watch them fleeing when you release Facehugger specimens into the room - chaos has never been so enjoyable. There is one area in which Aliens vs Predator 2 could be improved. That area is teamwork, or more specifically, the lack of it. While it's appropriate for Predators who usually work alone , the other species are historically prone to fighting in numbers. At least with the Alien campaign, for story reasons you start out as the only one around, and indeed, it's you who is responsible for setting the whole incident at the facility in motion.

But I'd at least expect the marines to back up their operatives. Instead, you only ever see your comrades at the start of the early missions, standing by a dropship while you wander off to take on the aliens single-handedly for no explainable reason. I wouldn't expect them to survive all the way through the game, but they should at least come with you initially.

Thankfully, Aliens vs Predator 2's multiplayer mode does allow for teamwork so provided you end up in a team with people who actually feel like co-operating, you can take on your foes together. Or you can blast the hell out of everyone else in the game since Aliens vs Predator 2 sports a wide variety of multiplayer modes playable over LAN or Internet.

Included are the standard deathmatch and team DM; Hunt, in which one player becomes the hunter, the other the hunted; Survivor, which is similar to Hunt but that those killed also become hunters; Overrun, in which attacking and defending teams compete to either invade or survive holed up in a complex; and finally, Evac, where the defenders have to reach an Evac Point and the attackers have to stop them getting there.

And as with AVP1 , all three species are available in multiplayer, each with their superbly balanced advantages and disadvantages. One minor niggle worth mentioning is the inability to choose the order of weapons to auto-switch to, which more modern FPS' allow.

This means in a heated firefight you can end up running your mini-gun dry and then getting caught in your own rocket blast. After a disappointing lapse with Blood 2 , Monolith appears to have more than redeemed itself with the excellent No One Lives Forever and now the hugely playable Aliens vs.

Predator 2. It captures the atmosphere of the Aliens and Predator films perfectly, from the spot-on sound effects right through to the genuine feeling of actually being one of the starring species pretentious as that may sound.

The game's only real flaw is the lack of any AI teamwork scenarios in the single-player campaign, but it remains markedly better than the first game, a title that was certainly no slouch. The targeting cursor of your disc weapon and shoulder cannon can be seen by your enemies, giving them a good idea where you are. And actually firing these two weapons deactivates your cloak, as does walking through water.

Also, your weapons, your cloaking device and the medi-comp device you can use to heal yourself rely on energy - you can regenerate energy by just switching to a free-energy device called an Energy Sifter which will replenish your energy meter. This device makes a hell of a noise when you use it though so any foes in the area are likely to cotton on to the fact you're there. Additionally, when it comes to fighting Aliens, you're not so hot - they can see you cloaked or uncloaked and whereas you can deal with a few humans up close, the Aliens are far better at close range combat than you are.

Combating Aliens usually involves backpedalling frantically while you're blasting away at them with your shoulder cannon. The most suprising thing about the Alien campaign is that you don't start the game fully-grown - instead you begin life as a Facehugger, as depicted in the movies.

With no defensive capabilities, you have to sneak your way around the corridors of the complex, climbing walls and skittering through vents till you find a lone victim to, er, hug faces with. The next level then starts with a wonderfully gruesome view from inside your victim's torso, which you gnaw and burst your way out of now in the second stage of Alien development: the Chestburster.

You're quite vulnerable at this stage and can no longer crawl around walls and ceilings; again, you have to stealthily move around the complex until you find a place with fluffy animals to nourish on and grow into an Alien drone proper. Only then do you get the ability to hack and slash your opponents to pieces, pounce at them or bite their heads off and feed on their bodies to restore your own energy.

While you might think playing as a lone Alien would require huge amounts of stealth, this isn't the case. Speed and cunning is more important - the latter is required to find alternate routes round the automated sentry guns that can cut you to pieces in seconds, while the former lets you get close to your opponents and take them out, especially with no long range weapons at your disposal.

A little disappointingly, enemies do tend to see you if even if you're hanging from the ceiling in a dark corner - in single player, at least. Multiplayer is a different story, since human players actually have to remember to look up. Unlike the previous game or the Aliens movie, Aliens vs Predator 2 doesn't solely take place in the corridors of a deserted colony or an Alien hive.

True, you do get to visit those locations, but you also get to wander around alien jungles as the Predator or through the corridors of the research complex and pods as all three species. The level design is pretty damn good and convincing. In fact, the game has a lot in common with the Aliens comics, which often centre around the dodgy activities of those attempting to exploit the Alien as a bio-weapon. Such attempts usually end in tears and much tearing of flesh and Aliens vs Predator 2 is no different.

All of this interspecies warfare looks superb, even on a modest Geforce2 MX; turn the detail levels lower, and the game will even run at a decent framerate on lower level PCs - we reached playable speeds on a PII But hey, when you're desperately backpedalling away from a horde of Aliens, you likely won't be admiring the texturing on the walls or your foes. And believe me, you will be doing a fair bit of running in this game. Aliens vs Predator 2 has to be the scariest game I've played in ages - the programmers have gone out of their way to shock you at every opportunity.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000