Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Video Games » Action » Driver 3  
Categories
Video Games
Wii
Playstation 2
Xbox
Nintendo DS
Playstation 3
Xbox 360
Related Categories
• Action
PC Games
Software Available for International Shipping
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Software
• Driving
Simulation
PC Games
Categories
Video Games
• All Games
PC Games
Categories
Video Games
• Racing Games
Game Genre of the Month
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Video Games
• Video Games Available for International Shipping
Specialty Stores
Video Games
• Driving
Simulation
Genre (feature_browse-bin)
Browse Refinements
Refinements
Video Games
• Windows 98
Operating System (feature_two_browse-bin)
Browse Refinements
Refinements
Video Games
• Windows ME
Operating System (feature_two_browse-bin)
Browse Refinements
Refinements
Video Games
• Windows XP
Operating System (feature_two_browse-bin)
Browse Refinements
Refinements
Video Games
• Video Games
Electronics
Categories
Target

Driver 3

Driver 3

zoom enlarge 

Other Views:
From: Atari
Category: Video Games

List Price: $19.99
Buy New: $9.95
You Save: $10.04 (50%)



New (5) Used (7) from $5.39

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.0 out of 5 stars 13 reviews
Sales Rank: 14315

Format: Cd-rom
Platforms: Windows 98, Windows Me, Windows Xp
ESRB: Mature
Media: CD-ROM
Autographed: No
Memorabilia: No
Number Of Items: 1
Batteries Included: No
Age: 17 - 20 years
Operating System: Windows 98
Shipping Weight (lbs): 2
Dimensions (in): 8 x 6 x 1

MPN: 25010
Model: 25010
UPC: 742725250109
EAN: 0742725250109
ASIN: B0000TQPIC

Release Date: March 22, 2005
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Condition: NEXT DAY FIRST CLASS SHIPPING! Box has some wear and crushing, but contents are brand new! Guaranteed to play perfectly or your money back!

Features:
  • Action driving game
  • Go deep undercover in Miami, Nice, and Istanbul
  • Detailed cities feature approximately 30 square miles of roads each
  • Both in-car and on-foot missions
  • For 1 player

Accessories:

  • PC Gamer (1-year)

Similar Items:

  • Driver Parallel Lines
  • Driver
  • Test Drive Unlimited DVD-Rom
  • Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas V2.0
  • Scarface The World Is Yours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
DRIV3R - The fun and thrills of the original Driver, combined with all-new gameplay mechanics, bring you the next great racing-action game! Play as Tanner, the undercover cop from the first two hit Driver games. This time he's out to bust an immense car-theft ring -- but his secret is about to be uncovered. If Tanner doesn't work fast, the mission is over - and so is Tanner's life. Realistic driving physics and crash models - if you can think of a way to wreck the car, you can do it


Customer Reviews:   Read 8 more reviews...

2 out of 5 stars Supposed to be better than GTA, but not   July 2, 2008
This game spent a lot of time in production delays and was hyped up to be better looking (which it was), with better gameplay and storyline than GTA. However, the only fun thing to do is try to hit pedestrians and bash into other cars. When it was reviewed by many game magazines, it was apparent that they too were underwhelmed with it and immediately wrote it off. Driver, Parallel Lines though, is much better. It was created after the take-over by Ubisoft. The graphics are much better and the gameplay and storyline are also very good. It is still trumped by the new GTA 4, but nonetheless a major improvement and shows promise that the next one (if it is produced) will deliver on its promises. The best thing about this game is you can buy it cheap and it doesn't make a modern gaming pc break a sweat.


3 out of 5 stars Eurotrash   May 15, 2007
It's pretty funny that a developer can record a "making of" segment on its game disc that chronicles its own screw-ups without even realizing them. Mr Edmonson brags that many years were spent just photographing and building the game's three cities, apparently oblivious that this waste of time was a primary reason for the game's failure. Had the team spent more time on gameplay and mission structure, and spent less time on architecture and idiotic neo-cool music videos, Driv3r could have been a smash.


Alarms begin to ring as soon as the game is fired up. The amazingly awkward main menu interface flummoxed me as I tried to simply go back and forth between settings menus. (And why cant I modify sound settings in game? And why in the world do I have to choose between English and BRAZILIAN languages at each startup, even after saving my profile?) It unfortunately gets worse the further you proceed through the game. As mentioned in other reviews, the amazingly awful default control scheme can be fixed with an analogue gamepad and some remapping. While the turning analogue sensitivity is perfect, there is strangely-or appropriately, considering the rest of the game-no analogue input for acceleration, making steady driving difficult.

The architecture of each city is pretty stunning. It's easy to see how the team spent years building the virtual landscapes, yet amazing how they could put such a weak game into them. Miami, while not the pink neon paradise of Vice City, is more realistic with a lot of white stucco structures and fantastic water effects. The only serious graphical criticism I can levy is the bizarre and unfixable lighting problem that causes many surfaces to flicker on and off. Brightness levels on certain objects are wrong, and there is a ridiculous bug in all car brakelights, which only illuminate when an outside light source shines on them. The exact opposite of course of how they should be (brighter in darker surroundings).

Lots of hidden stunt points and vertically explorable architecture are built into, but sadly unused by, the game. Tragically only one Miami mission is conducted at night, when the city really comes to life visually. Nice and Istanbul are similarly underused. The game had so much potential for great chase sequences going far beyond the very limited and frustratingly stifling scope of those built in to the story.

Based on the review so far, you've probably concluded that all copies of the game should be assembled for a giant burning ceremony. Well, yes, but not until you've played the two or three great driving sequences in each city. If you have even the slightest affection for the wonderful Driver: You Are the Wheelman, then Driv3r is worth the trouble. The detail, physics, engine sounds, etc of each vehicle are fantastic. Every car has a distinct rumble, and appropriately tears apart bit by bit with each crash. While a bit too floaty, the screeching powersliding nature of the vehicle physics fits a wild chase game like Driv3r perfectly. It's a shame the people who made the game have no clue how to balance difficulty, or maintain suspense through a sequence lasting longer than 30 seconds. The most difficult part of every chase mission is the first five seconds, when the player is allowed barely enough milliseconds to turn the vehicle around to begin the chase. And the pursuant can be inexcplicably lost while still in plain view. (And why is a green GPS-style dot provided on the map when the mission fail distance is unrelated?) The on-foot missions are as bad as mentioned everywhere; I wont bother ripping into them because no amount of expletives can do them justice.

Worst of all, or perhaps mercifully, the game is short. I was amazed at how quickly I finished the story mode, even with the number of controller-tossing restarts due to bugs and random illogical mission failures. And the story itself, while intriguing, is disastrously told through the "flashback" convention. Only, the game mixes present and past tense in its presentation and cant decide whether to unfold events naturally or through Ving Rhames's voiceovers. I giggled at the asinine cutscenes, which reminded me of the two guys from SNL's "Roxbury" dance club sketch: trying too hard to be Euro-cool with too much cologne on their purple zoot suits. Worse, in their attempt to be so stylized with the storytelling, the developers did a poor job of conveying the relations of any of the characters with their connection to the mission. I generally spent my time rolling eyes during a cutscene, only to have it end with instructions to chase a green dot with no relevance to the cinema. And the hipster-doofus London techno punk bands used for the soundtrack can all stay underground as far as I care.

So while it would be easiest to throw away Driv3r as a complete failure, it does have great redeeming qualities in its arhitecture and fun 70s-style cop movie driving. It stands at least as a blueprint for sadistic game development: work extremely hard for five years, spend a truckload of your publisher's money, and make one of the most un-fun big budget games to hit the shelves this generation.



1 out of 5 stars Lousy Support   January 5, 2007
this game does not load on the most common video cards. I am a Microsoft Partner, etc. and can't even get the game to load and run properly. Over a dozen documented contacts to tech support never get replies. To date, it has been 3 months and I have given up on the product and support.


4 out of 5 stars Kinda dissapointed... but hey, whatever.   September 28, 2006
 1 out of 1 found this review helpful

I walked into the game store, itching for a new game that could entertain me for a while. I picked up Driver 3 because all my friends said it was the shizznit (I forgot that was years ago when it first came out). The manager walking by said it was a cool game and it was only ten bucks (that kinda sold me).

First thoughts of the game where that the default controls are awful. Of course you can just change them in the options menu, but still, what was Atari thinking? Were they actually expecting me to steer a car using the "Z" and "X" keys? The rest are all messed up, it's as if when they were first setting the controls they put a blindfold on and started smashing buttons at random. Could have been avoided easily.

Don't be fooled by the pictures on the box or the images on amazon. The graphics are decent at best. Some things like cars, bikes, and water were all well done. But some of the scenery was real crappy. They could have done a better job with the roads as well.

The gameplay is hard. I have played all the Driver games in the series, and I feel that as the graphics got better, the gameplay got worse. THIS IS THE FIRST GAME THAT I HAVE EVER FLIPPED THE BIRD TO. Pretty frusterating levels, that you will have to restart over and over again. It's funny, at first Driver was strictly a driving game. Then in Driver 2, you could get out of your car and steal others. Now they're strapping you with guns (jump on the GTA band wagon why don't cha). The missions where you are on foot are lame. Tanner doesn't seem too agile. Simple things like jumping or swimming are laughable.

The music on the game's soundtrack is actually not that bad. It's worth looking up some of the artist and adds to the cutscenes. It really makes the game feel like a movie.

The cutscenes are pretty nice to look at, probably the best part of the game sadly. But it's also a lotta fun to jump cars off of make shift ramps and watch them explode into pieces. I guess it's worth a 10 spot if you've played all the recent games and need something to satisfy your craving. But don't say I didn't warn ya.



3 out of 5 stars Two-Sided   January 10, 2006
 3 out of 4 found this review helpful

Driv3r's driving side is great, complete with a nice variety of cars, boats, and motercycles. Physics are 4/5, police pursuit is 2/5, and level detail is pretty dam good.

The on-foot side of driv3r sucks, as the fixed camera-to-head 3rd person idea is horrible. GTA's camera is much better. Weapons are okay, but get boring after awhile.

Driv3r is a wannabe game riddled with bugs and glitches, but is addicting and is definately worth playing.


Copyright action-web.net 2007