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==========================Syphon Filter: Dark Mirror=================================
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Syphon Filter: Dark Mirror
Game Type ........ : Modern Tactical Shooter
Origin ........... : NTSC
Release Date ..... : Sep 18, 2007
Platform ......... : PS2
Media ........... : DVD
Filename ......... : st2-sfdm**
RARs ............. : Rar`s: 67x47.6MB, 1DVD: 3.10GB
Developer......... : SCEA, Sony Bend
Also on .......... : PSP
Oficial Preview and Screens Presentet By GameSpot:
http://www.gamespot.com/ps2/action/syphonfilter...review.html
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This port of the excellent PSP game
filters out online play and much of the fun
that comes with it.
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The Good
Decent campaign
Clean visuals
Lots of shooting.
The Bad
No multiplayer of any kind
Terrible one-liners
Little replay value.
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The Syphon Filter franchise is a PlayStation staple, but after its debut on the
original PlayStation, the series fell into a period of relative obscurity. That all
changed with Syphon Filter: Dark Mirror for the PlayStation Portable. With a decent
single-player campaign and sweet online multiplayer options, it wasn't just the best
Syphon Filter in a long time; it was also one of the best PSP games of 2006. Although
the PS2 port easily and accurately captures the single-player campaign, it leaves out
the online multiplayer, only to replace it with wimpy challenges. Sony filtered the
wrong part out.
But that won't stop Sony from trying to siphon 40 bucks out of your wallet for what
is basically a ho-hum action shoot-'em-up. You reprise the role of Gabe Logan, a
heavily armed man of action, as you try to foil a plot to destroy the world. There's
a sassy she-spy named Addison, and some hints at romance (when Gabe is in Addison's
quarters at a base, he comments "Oh, you brought that quilt with you"), but the plot
is mostly just a string of colorless bad guys you have to kill on your way to saving
the world.
Given that Dark Mirror is the video game equivalent of a Hollywood action movie, the
one-liners are worth more discussion than the plot. The game gets off to a promising
start when sidekick Lian informs Gabe that the enemy "was ready and waiting for us,
to which Gabe replies "They were waiting, but I guarantee they aren't ready." Oh snap!
Unfortunately, it's all downhill from there, degenerating into an impotent
"Damn you to hell!" near the end of the game, before bottoming out with the
inexplicable "Your skull is so dense, nothing can escape, not even intelligence!"
Nevertheless, the gameplay is mostly fun. It mixes entertaining shoot-outs with
cooperative sequences in which you and a non-player character attack a bad situation
together. In one of these, you guide a frightened UN soldier through a toxic
deathtrap with your flashlight, and in another, you order Lian to pin the enemy down
while you run from cover to cover. When you're simply running around shooting guys,
which is most of the game, a decent cover mechanic will usually let you make extremely
short work of the enemies.
From cover, you can safely aim at bad guys without worrying about damage. Combine
this with the fact that your first bullet is always dead on no matter what gun
you're using, along with the general lethality of headshots, and you'll have no
trouble making short work of the legions of foes who throw themselves before your
crosshairs. As you get used to the game, you'll become a pro at lining up headshots
with pretty much every weapon, and deftly plunk several enemies in a row with
single-shot kills. Part of this is due to limited enemy artificial intelligence.
(They prefer to stand in the open and shoot.) At any rate, you still feel like a
hotshot.
The only real problem is that one button shares two functions: changing weapons and
changing firing mode. Late in the game, you'll need to throw grenades and then
quickly shift to a high-powered submachine gun to subdue the toughest foes. In the
process, it's easy to mistakenly switch the gun to single-shot and waste a very
valuable window of opportunity. Aside from this one hitch, the controls are smooth.
The game controlled well on the PSP, and you get more of the same on the PS2 version,
but surprisingly enough the game also looks good. After all, a big part of what makes
PSP graphics seem pretty is the tiny resolution, but Dark Mirror reflects nicely even
on the big screen. It isn't visually spellbinding or anything, but the frame rate is
steady, and the visuals are clean and clear. The voice acting, on the other hand, is
strictly second-rate, and the music is rather unmemorable.
If this were the PSP version of Syphon Filter: Dark Mirror, we'd talk here about the
awesome multiplayer content. Considering that there isn't any in the PS2 version,
we'll instead talk about the fact that the campaign is a little less than 10 hours,
and isn't particularly worth replaying. It also isn't worth the 40 dollars the game
costs new. The single-player is fun, but it was more fun when it was attached to the
superior PSP game.
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