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Mass Effect


Bioware crafts a sci-fi universe that's worth saving

That said, it is a huge relief that the controls do not bear the typical scars of platform reassignment surgery (aka, a console port). Mouse and keyboard controls work beautifully, though the Mako’s steering controls tend to be squirrelly, resulting in a lot of over-correcting. To hack computer consoles and locked containers, you can solve a minigame that’s a sort of circular Frogger (also redesigned from the console version). Hard-level puzzles are tougher than they look.

On the whole, Mass Effect has outstanding production quality. The graphics aren’t technical wonders, but they are finely polished (though some strange flickering shadows on faces can be extremely distracting), and the design and detail of the aliens, particularly the Salarians and the Turians, is exceptional. The huge volume of voice work is almost all excellent, as well - the cast is full of recognizable voices like Seth Green (Robot Chicken, Family Guy), go-to deep-voice guy Keith David (Requiem for a Dream, Halo 2, Fallout), Lance Henricksen (Aliens, Millennium), and Marina Sirtis (Star Trek: The Next Generation), making the extensive dialogue trees and complex character interactions (complete with occasional “woohoo!” as The Sims call it) more interesting to explore. I did run into a couple of crash bugs towards the end, but averaging one crash every seven hours isn’t bad for a game of this size, and is nowhere near enough to make me warn gamers away from such a fantastic adventure. Mass Effect deserves a spot on your shelf next to the rest of the PC’s great RPGs.

DRM Alert
Mass Effect’s SecuROM copy protection requires an internet connection to activate your installation before you can play. Furthermore, it will only permit you to activate on three computers before you have to phone in and request more installs. (You can reinstall as many time as you like, but only on those three computers.) On the plus side, you don’t need to keep the DVD in the drive to play.

PC Gamer scores games on a percentage scale, which is rounded to the closest whole number to determine the GamesRadar score.

PCG Final Verdict: 91% (Editor’s choice)

May 27, 2008

You'll love
  • Excellent story
  • Energetic combat
  • Huge galaxy to explore
You'll hate
  • Terrible inventory management
  • Only one ending
  • Mako controls are tricky

 
2 Comments
Order Comments: Newest First | Oldest First
EvilCheerio  - 9 months 19 days ago 
Hey, theres always Steam, all the fun of the computer version without the DRM trying to screw you out of your rightly owned game
JohnnyMaverik  - 7 months 20 days ago 
In the end I cracked and bought this. I really, really wanted to get this game, but was put off by the DRM, which is ridiculious, I wanted to buy it, but felt I couldent because of the software they use to try and make people buy it... wtf. Wish I'd read this first since I didn't know the steam download comes SecuROM free, would have got it off there.

Other than that it's brilliant, character creation in terms of asthetics is a bit limited, combat takes a little bit of getting used to but once you get hang of it it's not too hard, but not ridiculiously easy either, and actually fun, which is great. Voice acting is good, characters are generally pretty cool, quests are interesting, the storyline is interesting, game world is big, game lore is MASSIVE and the game has real depth in a number of ways.

All in all with out the DRM issues I'd say the 9 out of 10 rating is spot on, not perfect but pretty damn close... and who wants perfect anyway, perfect is boring.
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The Knowledge
Mass Effect
Mass Effect

Genre: Role Playing
Release date: May 28, 2008
Published by: Microsoft
Developed by: BioWare
Franchise: Mass Effect
Min system requirements: 1 Gig (XP), 2 Gig, NVIDIA GeForce 6 series, ATI 1300XT or better, 12 Gigabytes, DirectX 9.0c
Recommended system: 2.6+GHZ Intel/2.4+GHZ AMD, 2 Gig, NVIDIA GeForce 7900, ATI X1800 XL, 12 Gig, DirectX 9.0c/5.1 sound
Multiplayer Modes:
Offline
1 player SOLO
9 AWESOME
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