Search Advanced SearchView Cart   Checkout   
 Location:  Home » Nintendo DS » Role-Playing » Neverwinter Nights 2 Gold  
Categories
Video Games
Wii
Playstation 2
Xbox
Nintendo DS
Playstation 3
Xbox 360
Related Categories
• Role-Playing
PC Games
Categories
Video Games
• All Games
PC Games
Categories
Video Games
• Video Games Available for International Shipping
Specialty Stores
Video Games
• Role Playing Games
Game Genre of the Month
Custom Stores
Specialty Stores
Video Games
• Role-Playing
Genre (feature_browse-bin)
Browse Refinements
Refinements
Video Games
• Video Games
Electronics
Categories
Target

Neverwinter Nights 2 Gold

Neverwinter Nights 2 Gold

zoom enlarge 

Other Views:
From: Atari
Category: Video Games

List Price: $39.99
Buy New: $27.45
You Save: $12.54 (31%)



New (9) Used (5) from $25.00

Avg. Customer Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 9 reviews
Sales Rank: 1145

Format: Cd
Platform: Windows
ESRB: Teen
Media: Video Game
Batteries Included: No
Age: 12 - 20 years
Operating System: Windows
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 1.1

MPN: 27625
UPC: 742725276253
EAN: 0742725276253
ASIN: B00118SU98

Release Date: May 6, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Features:
  • Bundle includes: Neverwinter Nights 2 and Neverwinter Nights 2 Mask of the Betrayer
  • Singleplayer or online multiplayer
  • Over 50 hours of gameplay
  • Create your own adventures and share them with your friends
  • Play your adventure as the Dungeon Master

Similar Items:

  • Neverwinter Nights: Diamond Compilation Pack (DVD-ROM)
  • The Witcher
  • Baldur's Gate 2: Ultimate Collection (Shadows of Amn and Throne of Bhaal)
  • Sins of a Solar Empire
  • Mass Effect

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
Neverwinter Nights 2 Gold combines Neverwinter Nights 2, the sequel to one of the best-selling and genre-defining role-playing games ever, and Neverwinter Nights 2: Mask of the Betrayer, which allows you to advance to epic levels (above 20) and choose from over 100 spells.


Customer Reviews:   Read 4 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars If it weren't for camera angles...   August 25, 2008
I liked this game. For all you PC complainers out there, you haven't owned a Mac for gaming, so you don't know pain...I took advantage of my Mac's ability to boot Windows, and played the original campaign on Mac (Aspyr product) and the MOTB expansion on Windows. The MOTB version absolutely blows the Mac version out of the water. I did note that when I installed, the automatic updater went to work and installed many, many patches, so maybe a lot of the problems have now been fixed. Unfortunately camera control is not one of them...it's atrocious.


4 out of 5 stars Your Mileage May Vary   August 24, 2008
OS: Vista Ultimate 64
Processor: 3Ghz Intel (forgot the exact name)
Graphics: nVidia 7950 GT
Sound: Creative Labs Xtreme Gamer Pro
Ram: 4 Gigs

This game runs fine on my system and it's on Vista 64.
You can set the graphics setting from low to high.
Check out the NWN 2 forums ([...]).

Some people have horrible time getting this game to run. Others run this fine.

The in game AI is not too good, but Tony K's AI ([...]) is awesome. Monsters and companions fight smarter and know when to switch from range to melee weapons. You can even set your companions to disarm traps, unlock doors, and pick up nearby loot for you (assuming they have the skills to do those things).

The player content for this game is small compared to NWN1, but it's growing. The player content and the community makes this game 4 stars.

The Original Campaign (OC) is a light fantasy. You grew up in a small farm now you must save the world. Some of the NPCs are very rememberable, while others you may chose not to include in your party unless you must.

The sequel Mask of the Betrayer is a much darker fantasy with the story surrounding your survival. The NPCs are more fleshed out and people seem to like this dark story more. Very few companions to join your party compared to the OC.

For me this series has tons of fun factor because you can customize your character, the gear, the monsters, and the game itself (within limits). The toolset lets you create your own world, but it's a heavy learning curve. The player community has put quite a bit of their material at the nwnvault.com and it's slowly growing.

If you like AD&D (this uses the 3.5 rules) you should checkout this game. The player community gives this game tons of replay value. I agree with other reviewers that this game should have been given more time before released.



3 out of 5 stars this has the original and add-on campaigns   August 1, 2008
The other reviews make many good points but none of them seem to have mentioned that there is a new campaign that is much better than the original campaign in this "gold" version. mask of the betrayer aint amazing but its not bad. Unfortunately the various improvements in the add-on dont effect the horrible original campaign. You can however play the add-on with out playing the original campaign. Mask of the Betrayer in no way beats Baldur's Gate 2, but its worth a go if you have a reasonably fast PC and you like "deep" single player PCRPG's. By the way, my PC never crashed once in single player mode. The game needs a fast PC with at least 2 gigs of RAM to run well and perhaps some folks were running under the specs.


2 out of 5 stars Some good.... some bad......   July 26, 2008
I agree with many of the other posters here - the baldur's gate series (especially No. 2) and the superb torment (why don't they make an oblivion esq. sequel???)were outstanding and was let down initially by NWN. I eventually spent quite a bit of time on that game online however, once I found a cool server. I then gave it up and spent quite a bit more time on WOW, but I find myself growing more and more mind numbingly bored with that game and decided to give NWN 2 a shot. I was suspicious however, with the relatively terrible reviews etc. and didn't have too high of expectations when I took it out of the box about a week ago.

The good-
The single player is a vast improvement over the original. Being able to control your henchmen in and of itself greatly improves the experience. The graphics are a nice step up, and found myself not overly dismayed by them. They are by no means on par with oblivion, however they are vastly superior to the original. The added classes from the 3.5 rules seem interesting, and the character creation / leveling process is pretty much intact from the original. The storyline is good so far, about 3/4 the way done I think with the first campaign. Not anywhere near as good as either baldur's gate 2 or torment, or the fallout games - about on par with temple of elemental evil I guess - but it is a lot better than the single player story in NWN.

The bad-
Muliplayer. I just cant get the thing to run at all. Stutters all over, crashes, simply gave up on it. Too bad too because I was really looking forward to checking out the game online.
For the single player, the pathfinding is horrible. Even worse than the original. So terribly frustrating when you consider they have had a lot of time to tweak this. In addition, the targeting is frustrating when it jumps back and forth between conversation and combat, loosing who and what you have targeted to jump to your main character and then leaving you fumbling back to try to target what you had previously to continue the fight. The inability to switch the leaders of your part is also garbage. Thirdly there are bugs where combat begins and the game will not let your pause - for 10 or more seconds at times. These are simple dynamics that you think they would have fixed in play testing, however with the multiplayer as horrendous as it is I guess they outsourced the play testing to the equivalent of nomadic tribesmen in Mongolia.

Too bad too because there would have been some good stuff here if they could have made it work.



2 out of 5 stars Alas, the other reviewers are right   June 29, 2008
 7 out of 7 found this review helpful

Having so thoroughly enjoyed the original game, I ignored the warnings of other reviewers reporting negative experiences with this sequel and went ahead and bought it anyway. But the complaints made by other reviewers are absolutely correct. Despite my meeting or exceeding all of the stated hardware requirements for the game, the thing crashes constantly. And, frankly, it's not woth the hassle. Plainly Atari, in typically corporate fashion, figured that they could turn a quick buck by buying up the rights to the game, turning out any old piece of shoddy junk, and people would still pay for it because they loved the original. It's immediately obvious that none of the love, sweat, tears, and creativity invested in the original game went into the sequel. The environment is disappoiningly static. Only a very small percentage of nonplayer characters allow you to enter into dialogue with them. Virtually none of the buildings allow you to enter and explore them. The NPCs lack any personality, style, or panache. The environment is consequently flat, lifeless, and noninteractive, lacking the myriad possibilities to explore and socialize of the original, which gave the original that successful illusion of navigating a real world. Quite a disappointment.

Copyright action-web.net 2007