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| From: Electronic Arts Category: Video Games
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $17.95 You Save: $2.04 (10%)
New (36) Used (11) from $17.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 45 reviews Sales Rank: 547
Platform: Playstation 3 ESRB: Mature Media: Video Game Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Age: 17 - 20 years Operating System: Playstation 3 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 0.1 x 0.1 x 0
MPN: 9851 Model: 15782781 UPC: 014633098518 EAN: 0014633098518 ASIN: B000PE0HBI
Release Date: December 12, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
Buy it for Portal alone! November 16, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Get Orange Box for Portal alone. Team fortress is fun, but I find myself in bad company when I want to play an online FPS. Half Life may have been groundbreaking at the time, but the gameplay is too monotonous compared with the games of 2008.
Great package!
Great Game, Terrible Sound Problem November 13, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I can't speak highly enough about the gameplay in Half-Life 2 and Portal. Phenomenal games. But the crackly sound problem is very real and very annoying. It happens way to often. I really can't believe how little EA / Valve care that they let this bug stay in the game and have not released a patch for it. The looong loading times I can deal with, but the sound problem really gets on my nerves.
Is it still worth getting? Yes, but only if this is the only way you have of playing Half-Life 2 and Portal, and if you're prepared to restart the game often when the sound goes screwy.
Amazing deal but good games October 25, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Right up front, I'll say I'm not a PC gamer; mainly because my computer hasn't been upgraded in years and not even sure it can run it. Also most of them tend to want a membership fee and all that Visa/Mastercard stuff hasn't applied to me in years so in the end I have to rely on console ports and more specifically, ports to the Playstation 3. A game like Half-Life 2 got massive praise, Gordon Freeman is practically a household name in a gamer's home and the Orange Box contains count em 5 games for you to get through. However, I wouldn't say I was absolutely blown away by Half-Life 2 and its 2 episodes but I can say I did enjoy it to a certain extent. Now, Portal on the other hand...
Half-Life 2 (Episodes One and Two): 3 games that deal with the adventures of Gordon Freeman after his mishaps at the Black Mesa Research Facility from the first Half-Life. City 17 is a dystopian environment, the Combine forces have taken control and places can get overrun by strange creatures. Gordon Freeman helps the human resistance and takes the fight to the Combine through the episodes.
Now when I first rented this game, I got a couple chapters in after dealing with an atrociously-controlled motorboat and thought the game isn't worth this much aggravation. Wanting to at least give it another chance, I got it again and made it past there and while I still think there's nothing really here that makes me think "amazing!", I have to say I had more fun later on, mainly thanks to the Gravity Gun. It reminds me of the Kinesis gun from the recent Dead Space where getting a faraway object allows you to drop it to create stepping stones or shoot it away from you. This comes in 2 uses: use it against debris such as abandoned cars and my favorite, launching explosive barrels at enemies as bombs or finding saw blades and launching them at their bodies and well, "torsos" is the word there. Later on, you get an item that allows you to command a previously dangerous-to-you enemy and now you can unleash them on enemies and it's a blast seeing them beat enemies to death.
My problem is that for all the technical achievements and fun aspects Valve put into the game, they also suffer one problem I don't notice a lot, that of delays. Not in terms of the game itself (since as I said, I don't follow the PC game scene) but within the game. Many times, I'll be playing and it'll be fun but then it gets derailed as I have to spend an inordinate amount of time to go do something in order to progress. For example, halfway in the game I get a buggy. Many, many times I have to get out of the thing, go somewhere and turn off a shield or clear away abandoned cars in order to leave and in one strange case, carefully traverse I-beams of a bridge and turn off a shield so my buggy can go on train tracks. Why can't it just be a nearby tower and not go through 20 minutes of careful walking? Or for that matter, shorten the time needed for use of the buggy?
Now, then we have Portal. And yes Portal is unbelievably short as I finished it literally in one 2 and a half hour sitting. However, the game is fun, brain-challenging and incredibly cute and funny. You play as a test subject for the Aperture Science. Given a gun which fires dual portals, you must clear a set number of room puzzles and make it to the next one. Fire one portal on the wall, one on a nearby ceiling and walk through and you'll find yourself tumbling from the ceiling. Another favorite tactic is putting one on a high up wall and one on the floor. Falling from high up, if you time it right, you'll go through the floor/high wall but more quicker than before, allowing access to previously inaccesible areas. Or in gLaDos terms, the AI running the tests, "speedy thing goes in, speedy thing comes out". This AI is arguably the star of the show as she's got a deadpan humor and has frequently hilarious bits of advice and comments. We also have the droids you have to work your way past which also is voiced by the same VA as the AI and have cute sing-songy type voices and if it wasn't for the fact that they're trying to kill me, their "there you are" thing would be adorable.
I didn't bother checking out Team Fortress 2 so can't really comment about that but as for the games itself, if you're an FPS fan than obviously you've heard of Half-Life and most likely played them already and want them all on one package. For the rest of us, it's a good thing to check out and see what's all the fuss apart but it still won't unseat Bioshock, Shadow of the Colossus or Metroid Prime as one of my favorite games...and that's with all 5 games too.
awkard port of a fantastic series / franchise October 21, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I hesitantly purchased the Orange Box for PS3 knowing the software maker's hatred for the PS3 platform. The game is playable with long load times between scenes. Online play is ok but limited compared to the PC version. I really wanted to play this game but probably should have built a 1000 dollar PC to play it rather than skimp and get it for PS3. In scenes with lots of activity there are slowdowns in framerate. I would guess down to 30fps or lower... Having said this it is playable and enjoyable. It's worth $25 or so but not more. If you are serious about playing HL or TF2 you'll probably wish you had a fast gaming rig.
PS3 Orange Box is a must have October 6, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I was hesitant to purchase this game due to some reviews claiming that it had frame rate issues on the PS3. I am happy to report that those issues were either overblown or fixed. If you don't have this compilation of 5 games, you need to get it. The price drop to $29.99 make it a steal. I would pay that for Portal by itself. My girlfriend actually likes Portal! It is so different from other games. It is my understanding that Valve may not port future games to the PS3. That would be unfortunate. All their games on this disk are great and I recommend it with no reservation.
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