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Homeworld

Homeworld

List Price: $39.99
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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: The best graphics I have ever seen
Review: When I saw the screenshots I thought they were from an intro movie, but they were not. The game actually plays like you are sitting in space with a camera and can move around at will. The ability to zoom in on any of your spaceships at any level or direction is simply jaw-dropping. It looks so good it is hard to remember you are playing a game and not watching a movie. Graphics don't make a game and there are definite instances where the game looks good and plays bad. This isn't the case. The storyline is compelling and easy to follow. Very well scripted. The scenarios are challenging and the only drawback is you have to carry over the ships you use from previous scenarios to the next, and if you don't build enough or the right kind it could catch up to you two or three scenarios down the road. However the concept is realistic and makes the game extremely fluid. Most people are going to have to take some steps back though as they play the game. Also, make sure you have enough computer to run this game. I am running on a PIII 500 with a Voodoo3 and 128 MB of RAM. It wants a 233 processor. I initially ran it on a 200 just to see how it would perform and it did not perform well at all. If you don't have a solid video card and I would say at least a 350 with 64 MB of RAM your performance is likely to suffer.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Game of the Year!
Review: Homeworld was a groundbreaking game in almost every aspect; it shatters the 2D limits that we have placed in RTS games(real time strategy). The graphics are amazing but I would recommend a powerful system if you want to get the full impact. Not many games can capture the true feeling of 3D combat as Homeworld can. Granted, the control system is not top-notch but this game sparkles everywhere else. The music is impressive and the storyline unfolds like a good sci-fi should. I'll guarantee that this game will be the Game of the Year!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the best real-time strategy games ever...
Review: "Homeworld" - Relic Entertainment - Sierra Studios - PC - Grade:A+

Every year for the past few years, someone has released a game that has taken an established genre of computer gaming and turned it from something stale and bland into something fresh and exciting again.

These are the games other companies imitate, because the developers of these particular games innovated.

In 1997, Blizzard's "Diablo" took the term RPG and game it a strong dose of action and spawned dozens of imitators. Last year, Valve Software's "Half-Life" took the nearly lifeless first-person shooter market and made it viable again by adding something simple - story.

"Homeworld" is this year's innovator and the lesser companies are already scrambling to copy the lessons taught by it.

I offer this word of warning, though - take care, as this could become crack for any one of us. I already suspect that "Homeworld" will be one of those titles that always just seems to take "just ten more minutes" of time. You've been warned. It's incredible, and addictive. Damn timesinks.

Much, much more than just another "Starcraft" knockoff, Relic Entertainment's first project "Homeworld" is a drastic reinterpretation of the real-time strategy game. In a field once ruled by two-dimensional games, "Homeworld" has made the drastic jump - into 3-D.

For perhaps the first time ever, players can rotate around in the vast reaches of space, commanding large armadas of fights, corvettes and capital class starships in epic battles that would make George Lucas proud.

The best way to describe what it feels like to be playing "Homeworld" is to envision yourself as the commander of the Rebel Fleet in the end sequence of "Return of the Jedi," confronting a large armada of imperial ships bent on your destruction. First and most importantly, the interface is incredibly intuitive and easy use. This said, go through the tutorial. You still have to learn how the camera system works before you'll have the intricacies down pat. They have to teach you how to look before you walk, then fly.

The camera system is half of the joy of "Homeworld." You can watch battles from the far distant lofty perch above, or you can zoom in close and follow the path of one of your ships as it zips and zooms in its combat with your opponent.

All the time, every ship is clean and well-designed. The graphics are crisp and showy without being distracting, although there have been moments where I've felt like Nero watching Rome burn - the battle was just too beautiful for me to do anything.

Ships are divided into four classes: fighters, which are small ships designed for ship-to-ship combat (think X-Wing); corvettes, which are made for heavier combat but not as much (think Corellian Blockade runners - i.e. Leia's ship at the very beginning of "Star Wars") and capital class, which are designed to have heavy firepower but low, low speed (think Star Destroyers).

In addition to these four classes, you also have your Mothership. The Mothership is your central base of command. If it blows up, you lose. Guard it with your life.

Misplacing the Mothership will be tough, too, considering the thing is friggin' huge compared to your tiny little scout ships. This sense of scale was exactly what the game needed to make players feel like they were there.

Moving ships is incredibly easy, as simple as point-and-click. You can also set your units into various combat formations, as well as tell them to assume a defensive or offensive stance.

It sounds like a lot to learn, but you pick it up quick once you get going. Learning the keyboard shortcuts and hotkeys is another thing that will help you keep your ships flying.

From the opening of the game, however, it's clear that "Homeworld" is gearing for a slightly older audience. Those of us think of "Alien" and "Blade Runner" with fond memories, we fit right at home. The basic storyline is that the race of people you belong to finds the remains of a crashed spaceship on your planet. Within a few dozen years, you've figured out your people did not originate on this planet. With the discovery of a map, the construction of the Mothership begins as you and your people prepare to journey to your Homeworld. "Homeworld" is also filled with one of those big, epic, sweeping scores that put the feeling of the vastness of space into you from the getgo and never loosens up.

While the single player mode is a bit short (only 15 missions), the multiplayer mode more than makes up for it, letting up to eight players duke it out in the vastness of space. If you've ever wanted to see a truly epic battle on your computer, right now, it doesn't get any better than this.

Homeworld isn't perfect, with a few features that would have been nice to have not making it into the final version, but the merits of the game so far supersede these petty little complaints so as to rub them out.

Remember that Homeworld is a first-generation title that's the first release from a team, and you better this bodes well for Relic.

"Homeworld" doesn't just chip away at the old RTS mold, it shatters it with a massive sledgehammer and keeps on pounding until all that remains is dust.

A new watermark has been set.

If you've ever been vaguely interested in real-time strategy, space combat or even science-fiction computer games at all, do yourself a favor and buy "Homeworld."

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Homeworld is a top-notch 3D strategy game in 3D space.
Review: Pros:

1. Graphics are breathtaking, some of the finestI've seen, especially while viewing a battle up close.

2.Excellent sense of 3D space... because it is! Go anywhere! Attack from above and below.

3. Great interactive tutorial teaches you the common actions in the game.

4. Highly integrated network multiplayer and skirmish (vs. CPU) modes really keep you playing.

5. Sound tracks and voices are also top notch; not overpowering or distracting to game play.

6. I love the fact that your fleet in single player missions carries over from mission to mission and whatever you have ending a mission is what you have starting the next mission; it really gives you a sense of survival.

Cons:

1. There are no "health gauges" shown for your enemy. Your only feedback are varying degrees of "smoke and flames" emitting from your opponent's ship.

2. Although I experienced no video problems, you've got to have the "latest and greatest" video drivers to get this game to work.

3. There are limits to the number of ships you can have in space at any given time. At least the limit is per-ship type and once you go under that limit you can build another one of those ships again. This is more of an issue with network play that the single missions.

4. The 2, single player races are visually different, but are otherwise almost identical in terms of ship capabilities. I would have expected great differences in ships beyond appearance.

5. Game play bogs down if you are viewing on average about 25 - 35 ships in heavy battle (of course this varies with system configuration).

6. I can't stop playing this game!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nothing short of amazing!
Review: I've been waiting on a game like this for years. In a nutshell, what you've got here is a chance to re-create your own Battle of Endor. The single player campaign (only 16 missions) could have been longer, but the multi-player portion of the game is astounding. I have had battles with over 200-300 fighters buzzing around and dozens of capitol ships blasting away at each other.

BELIEVE THE HYPE! The graphics are incredible and the computer AI is better than most games in this genre. The only thing that would make this game better is if someone would find a way to merge it and Master of Orion II into one game.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This game doesn't raise the bar, it completely blows it away
Review: What could be better then playing Command and Conquer in full 3D? Playing Homeworld! Homeworld is everything C&C is only better. The true 3D gameplay completely enthralled me. The graphics are top notch and very custimisable. The music is better than most sci-fi movie soundtracks. Most of all the game made me think, more so than any other stradegy game out there. Five stars, easily!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Ok, but too slow
Review: When I first got this game I thought it was perfect, but once I got to many ships, I couldn't move my mouse at all. Anyway I thought it had pretty good graphics as long as it didn't freeze. I suggest this software to anyone who has a very fast computer.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Homeworld is the best!
Review: Everyone is a right. Homeworld is a game that introduces us to a whole new kind of game. This is not a regular third-person 3D game. It's not like Myth/MythII where there is a limited rotatation around characters and the action. In Homeworld, you can *fully* rotate around ships and other objects in a real 3D world. Over the top, under the bottom, and spin around ships. It actually takes some getting use to, once you do, it's amazing. Another plus is the amazing graphics of not only the ships and objects, but also the explosions, thrust of the ships engines, ships "jumping" into and out of hyperspace, and the other eye candy.

After a couple hours playing this game, you will find yourself in the Homeworld universe; you will feel like you are really there. However, Homeworld is not all eye candy, it has a really good story that will keep you stuck to the game and the plot line.

But why did I give this game only 2 stars? It is probably the buggiest game I have ever played, and many of the most anonying bugs were never fixed. I had a number of times where I would hit a bug where I could not complete the level and had to step to the previous level! I would save the buggy game and reload it, still messed up. Would step back to a previous save on the same level, and it would still be messed up. If you hit these bugs in multiplayer, you were screwed (I remember the "build bug" would halt production of large ships). I never did have an enjoyable multiplayer game, since someone in the match would always hit one of the nasty bugs. After that, they would be easy to knock out of the game. The buggyness of Homeworld has prevented me from buy Homeworld 2.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Ender Wiggen eat your heart out!
Review: The best computer game, EVER. true 3D fleet combat in a gorgeous anime-inspired universe. I have been playing it daily for almost a year now. Everthing about this game is perfect, the music is haunting, the background and feel are epic and mature. Truly a masterpeice!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: going home
Review: this is simply the best computer game i've ever played. eye opening graphics, huge spaceships, massive backing storyline. what more could you ask for?


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