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Axis & Allies Review
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Manufacturer: Atari Find all Atari reviews
ESRB Rating: Teen
Platform(s): Windows Me, Windows XP, Windows 98, Windows 2000 Release Date: November 2, 2004
Average Rating: 3 out of 5 Stars
View Axis & Allies Details |
Retail Price: $29.99 Online Sale Price: $8.99 Save $21.00 Today! * Price is subject to change.
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User Submitted Axis & Allies Reviews
Date: 2008-11-25 Wonderful game Okay, this game is hands down one of the best games I've ever played. The graphics are magnificant, the plot, well the plot follows real history, but the axis domination plot is relevant. They don't try to go crazy with what the axis could do. All the details are accurate, it has great replay value because of the map editer and the WWII game, where you play as any of the five powers and control the out come the way you want it. The online play is wonderful, there is no real reason not to like this game unless you're pacifist or hate WWII, in which case you probably shouldn't have tried the game in the first place. 5/5
Date: 2007-08-17 One of my favorite RTS games, even better on multiplayer It seems all the people giving this game a negative review are people who have played the Axis & Allies board game and are thinking this is the video game version of it. I've never played the board game but I have been playing RTS and strategy games my whole life and this is one of my favorite.
Here's what I love: 1. The fact that when you build soldiers, you get a whole squad of troops and not just one unit such as in Age of Empires. 2. Units have morale and will retreat if they are losing or have been in combat too long 3. You get money by building up your base and by capturing cities, not by gathering resources such as in other RTS games. This makes capturing and holding cities a key part of the game. 4. You build a supply line where your troops can recover their health. I think every RTS should have this feature since it adds to the realism. 5. The fact that you can buy upgrades for your troops and vehicles, and they get promoted as they gain experience. 6. The variety of troops you can build is great. Everything from SAS troopers, paratroopers, snipers, kamikaze troops, conscripts, tiger and king tiger tanks, tankettes, and much much more. 7. The online multiplayer is great and probably the best feature of this game. It has a dedicated community of players, some of whom are insanely good. If you buy this game I suggest you go straight to multiplayer since it's so much more fun than singleplayer.
Here's what I hate:
1. Some of the general's abilities are ridiculous, such as the V-weapon and A-bomb. These are superweapons you can call in to basically annihilate the enemies army. They are unrealstic for the simple fact they can be called in instantly, right after you click the button, and I don't think A-bombs or V-weapons were ever against troops in combat during WW2. 2. The airplanes and bombing in this game looks like it was done half-heartedly. You don't actually control the planes, just build airbases and point to where you want to bomb. 3. In multiplayer especially, the game usually evolves to both sides building nothing but heavy artillery, which of course is unrealistic since infantry were a key part of battles in WW2, but not so in this game.
Despite these small flaws, I love this game and you should definetly get it if you like strategy games or WW2.
Date: 2007-03-22 Good A good overall game to play if you are looking for basic stratigic gameplay. However, if you are looking for a hardcore Roelplaying or stratigic game this is not the one to go for. Good game for the younger crowds or pre-teen or younger to play.
Date: 2007-02-09 Maybe better for adullts?!?!?!? Seems like the adults are giving this game a better rating than the kids. Maybe you have to have been raised in the 50's and 60's, having heard all your dad or grandad's war stories to appreciate it. The strategies to win are subtle and endless. Yea, the game guide is about 85% percent helpful, but in a few scenarios, it seemed like they were playing a different version of the game. In most scenarios I've discovered at least several different ways to win other than what was presented in the guide. Atari definitely made a 95% completed game and then seemed to have abandoned it with no upgrades to address the limitations and bugs. Their support is non existent with a bad, don't give a crap, attitude. However unofficial websites, such as Triple Threat Clan and Spotters Guide, address some of the problems. You can find an upgrade there that expands the capabilities of the units and the number of units allowed (this addresses a negative in a previous feedback). Finally when you access the editor capability of the game, then you can begin to carry out battles that either duplicate the actual ones or are variations on them. I spent a week designing a 1941 Singapore scenario between the British and the Japanese that geographically looks very realistic, as well as, choreographs the exact campaign by the Japanese to a scary degree. It is fascinating to experiment with varying the variables and seeing how the outcomes change. You can download these scenarios on unofficial sites and play them. It has become one of my favorite games.
Date: 2006-11-24 A WW2 Fan This is a great game for kids and adults you just need to be a fan of RTS's (Real Time Strategy). The people that have reviewed this are obviously turn-based fans (The difference is that in Turn Based games you move one guy on a board and click end turn and the next person goes, In a RTS there is no end turn button on the screen you actually reinact the battles.) From a person who enjoys RTS's I think this game is great because I can control units and tell them where to move this makes the game much more realistic.
Overall as a RTS and WW2 fan I would suggest everyone get this game and you will have fun for many hours through everything it has to offer campeign, custom, lan, and internet gaming
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