Netbookist: Netbook Games, Tweaks, Challenges » free http://netbookist.com Netbook Games, Tweaks, Challenges Thu, 09 Jan 2014 15:15:54 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.8.1 Reddit: Steam is offering Left4Dead 2 for free http://netbookist.com/blog/2013/12/26/reddit-steam-is-offering-left4dead-2-for-free/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=reddit-steam-is-offering-left4dead-2-for-free http://netbookist.com/blog/2013/12/26/reddit-steam-is-offering-left4dead-2-for-free/#comments Wed, 25 Dec 2013 21:00:31 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1765 According to Reddit’s r/steam, Steam is offering Left4Dead 2 for free and will be free for Christmas Day until Dec. 26, 10 a.m. GMT -8.

Steam is currently down and reports have that you must both add it to your account and install it to be able to keep the game.

Link

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Free. But can you access Steam to get it in time?

According to Reddit’s r/steam, Steam is offering Left4Dead 2 for free and will be free for Christmas Day until Dec. 26, 10 a.m. GMT -8.

Steam is currently down and reports have that you must both add it to your account and install it to be able to keep the game.

Link

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FREE: Fallout, Fallout 2, Fallout Tactics until 14 December http://netbookist.com/blog/2013/12/13/free-fallout-fallout-2-fallout-tactics-until-14-december/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-fallout-fallout-2-fallout-tactics-until-14-december http://netbookist.com/blog/2013/12/13/free-fallout-fallout-2-fallout-tactics-until-14-december/#comments Thu, 12 Dec 2013 20:58:34 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1730 GOG.com is giving out three Fallout classics until Saturday, 14 Dec., 1:59 p.m. GMT. It’s completely free!

 

Do note that you will have to sign up and these three games are extremely popular. This might result in GOG’s website going down, or disallowing you to login because they are being overwhelmed.

 

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Get it now and keep it in your GOG library!

GOG.com is giving out three Fallout classics until Saturday, 14 Dec., 1:59 p.m. GMT. It’s completely free!

Wat.

 

Do note that you will have to sign up and these three games are extremely popular. This might result in GOG’s website going down, or disallowing you to login because they are being overwhelmed.

 

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Battlefield 1942 on a netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2013/01/29/battlefield-1942-on-a-netbook/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=battlefield-1942-on-a-netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2013/01/29/battlefield-1942-on-a-netbook/#comments Mon, 28 Jan 2013 16:59:32 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1624 As of writing, Battlefield 1942 is still available for free on Origin – you just have to download it via this link because it is more difficult to find it on the Origin program. Get it before 1 March 2013.

Battlefield 1942 is a first-person shooter first released [...]]]>

Planes are in high demand, as proven by the number of campers in the airfield. They range from heavy bombers (B17), light bombers (Ilyushin, AichiVal, SBD-5), and fighters (Zero, Yak9, BF109).

As of writing, Battlefield 1942 is still available for free on Origin – you just have to download it via this link because it is more difficult to find it on the Origin program. Get it before 1 March 2013.

Bring the boom boom pow to your enemies.

Battlefield 1942 is a first-person shooter first released in 2002. When it came out, it represented  a breakthrough in this genre. You know a game is successful when you keep getting the same thing again and again for years – see the Battlefield series, The Sims and Call of Duty.

It added a variety of ways you can have a rampage over your enemies including blowing them up with a plane’s cannons, blow them up with explosives, or just run them over with your jeep. Have a battle on sea, land and air. Work in teams to coordinate artillery fire, or work alone and climb up a mountain to snipe your enemies.

Each class and each spawn point gives you different abilities and vehicles to choose rom

The game is primarily a multiplayer game, and single player merely means playing the game on the same maps but with really dumb bots. On this note, the game is still highly playable because there are still many servers and players online.

The game runs quite poorly, unfortunately, on a netbook with internal graphics. Playing the game at 640x480x16 with everything set at low, and a disadvantaging visiblity of 50 to 75 per cent, you get a framerate of about 5-20 depending on how many people there are and how many objects there are on a map.

On the other hand, if you have a separate graphics processor, such as an ION 2 like the netbook  that I have, you can play this game without much slowdowns. Running on the ION 2, you can play at Medium settings with a 100% visibility and get a framerate of 15-40, again the same slowdowns will apply, especially when there is a lot of action.

The game runs at a 4:3 resolution, so if you do not want to play with a stretched image, follow this link.

Overall, I’d get the game whether or not you have a discrete graphics processor. It is one of the most entertaining game to have on your computer when you are bored – in class with the university’s WiFi or when you are travelling and can’t bring your main computer.

Tanks: from heavy tanks like the TIger to tank destroyers such as the M10, and everything in between.

Like

The pioneer BF1942: still with all its lustre and nostalgia.

A great variety of weapons and vehicles

Dislike

Runs poorly on integrated graphics

If you’re used to the newer Battlefields, the features in this game might feel limited. I see it as simplicity.

Verdict

It’s free – until 1st March 2013 – you have nothing to lose, so get it. If you have an AMD C-series processor or a Nvidia graphics card in your netbook, you will have a good time. It is playable on integrated graphics, but you won’t get a good score due to a choppy framerate.

An excellent game, simple and varied.

Gameplay: GG

Graphics: Great… unless you have integrated graphics

Work needed to get game to play: Plays right out of the box.

Each class and each spawn point gives you different abilities and vehicles to choose rom BF1942 2013-01-22 18-52-45-20 BF1942 2013-01-22 18-52-46-67 bf1942 2013-01-22 19-03-08-40 Tanks: from heavy tanks like the TIger to tank destroyers such as the M10, and everything in between. bf1942 2013-01-23 18-26-44-21 BF1942 2013-01-23 18-33-24-27 Bring the boom boom pow to your enemies. BF1942 2013-01-23 19-21-48-44 One of the many ways to blow your enemy up.

 

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FREE: Commandos 3: Destination Berlin from 21 to 22 June http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/06/21/free-commandos-3-destination-berlin-from-21-to-22-june/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-commandos-3-destination-berlin-from-21-to-22-june http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/06/21/free-commandos-3-destination-berlin-from-21-to-22-june/#comments Thu, 21 Jun 2012 13:56:37 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1536 No time to describe what the game is about. I’m not even sure if it’s anything like the original Commandos. All I know is that Greenman Gaming is offering it free for twenty-four hours starting 11am GMT.

Get it now while it lasts!

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FREE! Get it now!

No time to describe what the game is about. I’m not even sure if it’s anything like the original Commandos. All I know is that Greenman Gaming is offering it free for twenty-four hours starting 11am GMT.

Get it now while it lasts!

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Lords of the Realm II on a netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/05/01/lords-of-the-realm-ii-on-a-netbook/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=lords-of-the-realm-ii-on-a-netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/05/01/lords-of-the-realm-ii-on-a-netbook/#comments Tue, 01 May 2012 04:11:38 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1512  

I have often triumphed a truth about games – good graphics, great sound and a great storyline is nice to have, but these elements don’t make the game. There are games out there which you play once, and then never play it again, until, perhaps, nostalgia hits you, and then there are games out [...]]]>  

Crappy screenshot? Sorry - I can't seem to take pictures in Windows mode without getting the colours all garbled.

I have often triumphed a truth about games – good graphics, great sound and a great storyline is nice to have, but these elements don’t make the game. There are games out there which you play once, and then never play it again, until, perhaps, nostalgia hits you, and then there are games out there which can be infinitely replayable. The key difference? A game’s concept.

There aren’t too many games out there that don’t follow the logic of safety. The biggest example out there is probably Call of Duty with its many iterations of pretty much the same thing.

But then there are games out there which also try something new. If we look at The Sims, which was a game that was predicted to fail, or if we look at Theme Hospital, we see how unique ideas can translate to a timeless game. People still play Theme Hospital – just look for mods that try to wrestle with Windows 7 compatibility issues.

And on that note, my friend recently introduced me to a game that is so addictive, I haven’t had time to… write on Netbookist. I’m sorry.

The game is called Lords of the Realm II. It’s a sixteen year old game that has such a good concept that I don’t even mind suffering 256 colours and 640×480. It’s a game that seems like a mix of Civilization and Age of Empires. Yes – your goal is to conquer and smite your enemies until you are the one and only left.

Every turn, you have to deal your domestic issues first, and then military issues next. A bit like Civilization.

You allocate your citizens into different industry – wheat farming, cow herding, stone and iron mining, forestry and blacksmithing. There’s a cycle to this – you feed your peasants so that they multiply and provide you with labour (and don’t overthrow you), once you have extra labour, you allocate them to resource hunting, and then putting these resources into building arms. You then raise an army with the weapons you have – all while taxing your peasants a nonsensical 5% tax that won’t put much into your coffers until your empire becomes massive.

With the army you raised, you then go out to conquer neighbouring counties. And this is where this game turns from being a turn-based strategy into a real-time strategy. Every time you fight an enemy army, you must strategize on how best you can make the full use of expensive-but-strong knights, or your archers, which are terrible at self-defense but can shoot enemies miles away. Or you can go trampling on their land, disrupting their economy and causing a displeased peasantry.

The game ramps up in intensity as you proceed from fighting just one opponent to have to deal with four of them. Things get tougher too – land starts out unarable or you might not have an iron mine in your county, causing you to need to buy it from roving caravans.

And because of this convergence of Civ-like elements and AOE-like elements, Lords of the Realm II tends to have the addictiveness of Civ, while giving you more control over battles by putting you into a real-time fight. You’ll see your time disappear as you have one more turn… and then another.

If you want to get this game, you have to search it up online – it’s considered abandonware, so I suppose you can find it really easily. I’d recommend you the place I got the game from, but I don’t want you to suffer 5kb/s speeds.

Like

Civ-like turn-based strategy

AOE-like real-time warfare

Extremely addictive, in a “one…more…turn…” sense

Dislike

Low-res graphics

Verdict

This game is so good, you probably could play it all day, all night. It’s simple but extremely fun!

Gameplay: Engrossing.

Graphics: It’s the 90′s!

Work needed to get game to play: Minimal, though getting a screenshot… oh god why…

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FREE: Cart Life – The Sims meets Harvest Moon halfway in Georgetown on your netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/03/16/free-cart-life-the-sims-meets-harvest-moon-halfway-in-georgetown-on-your-netbook/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-cart-life-the-sims-meets-harvest-moon-halfway-in-georgetown-on-your-netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/03/16/free-cart-life-the-sims-meets-harvest-moon-halfway-in-georgetown-on-your-netbook/#comments Fri, 16 Mar 2012 15:41:11 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1483 Cart Life is a retail/life simulation game whereby you have to deal with your day job, your personal issues, and your necessities. To elaborate, your day job consists of handing a food stand – be it coffee stand, news stand or hot dog stand. You have different personal issues such as handling divorce or feeding [...]]]>

Adventures in retail...

Cart Life is a retail/life simulation game whereby you have to deal with your day job, your personal issues, and your necessities. To elaborate, your day job consists of handing a food stand – be it coffee stand, news stand or hot dog stand. You have different personal issues such as handling divorce or feeding the cat. Lastly, you need to feed yourself or feed your addiction and go to bed. The game is truly a one part Harvest Moon in the business management sense, and the other part The Sims with a storyline placed in between.

Poker facing a customer will not get you a tip

The game is played in outright black and white, and most items looks square-ish and pixelated. Call it minimalism or blame the producers’ ability to make things look fancier, but the graphics doesn’t really make the game a whole lot worse. I’d say while the black and white does add to the ghetto life image, the squares and blocks that gives the game a retro feel, kinda makes me wonder how this game runs so smoothly on Windows 7.

Yes, the game runs excellent on Windows 7, and simply because it isn’t an old game despite how it looks. It is recent, and still being improved upon. You do have to be minimally savvy to install the game, as it does not come with an installer. Instead, you have to extract the files into a folder, and to play the game, you have to run Cart Life.exe.

Here’s the deal: when I played the game on my netbook, there was a bit of an issue. It won’t load. Everytime I would run the game, there will be some error stating that my graphics driver (Intel GMA3150) is not supported. After running winsetup.exe in the folder, I changed the Graphics Driver to DirectDraw 5, and it worked fine thereafter.

After fixing these little problems, you can then enjoy a really interesting indie game. In the free version, you can play as Melanie, who is going through a divorce, and has a lot of things on her plate. She has to handle her divorce, handle her daughter and handle Seth, her former-husband-to-be.

Then there’s the immigrant perspective from which you can start the game. Andrus Poder is another character which is a migrant from the Ukraine, he come from old kuntry, no muney, no haos. He has little possessions – a cat, a few smokes and a cigarette, with a paltry $2,200 or so, to which he will spend two fine grands on a news stand in a ghetto.

Sometimes, you just wait for customers with your fingers crossed.

The game starts from there. You are now compelled to find your own way into business. Should you sell bagels, hot dogs, coffee, fancy coffee (i.e. latte, espressos), newspapers or some secret recipe? And in this mix, how do you price your goods? Once that is done, you’ll be compelled to sell stuff. Meet the customer, small talk them for a bigger tip?

Every customer has different preferences. Some like demand that you serve them fast. For example, the Chef with his Gordon Ramsey like attitude is curt and has little patience. You’ll have to sell your stuff fast or he’ll leave. And that begins the three step process to sales: first, the computer prompts whether you remember what the customer wanted in the order, then it asks you to type a 20 – 30 character text, and then it asks you to handle the change via mental sums (i.e. what is $20.00 – $3.21). Coming from a retail background, I was shocked that I needed to do mental sums, I would just type it into the computer and… oh wait, Andrus doesn’t have a computer. And that is what is so engrossing about the game. It’s a life simulation, retail simulation and then it’s fun too. It is also free.

I did arrive at a bit of a shock and no awe, though, while playing as Andrus. After racking up enough dough, I managed to pay the weekly rental of $119, on the next Monday after Andrus arrives in Georgetown. The game then goes into a cutscene with his cat cuddling him. And the game ends.

That was truly terrifying and disappointing. I wanted to make espressos. Now I’ll never manage. I wanted to make fancy bagels. Now I’ll never have enough time to make the dough (both money and dough dough) to make the bagel. The producer of this game justifies that this is part of the plan, as he wanted the story that surrounds these characters to make sense, which necessitates an ending at a set point in time. Perhaps he is right in another sense too, because sandbox games do get really boring once you’ve reached the top – once you can’t upgrade anymore or once you’ve made a ton of cash that you can never finish. On subsequent playthroughs though, you do get a bit better, a bit more efficient, and you find out little nuggets everytime. It gets better and better.

Overall, this game is an excellent game for your netbook. It runs excellent, plays great (if a bit short), and is a great look into ghetto life and paycheck-to-paycheck economics. As a netbook game, you’ll be able to enjoy it almost perfectly as long as you do the necessary fixes. There are a few bugs, though, as this game is not exactly complete, so do remember to save your game daily. You can get the game here.

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FREE: Mari0 – Mario with a Portal Gun http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/03/12/free-mari0-mario-with-a-portal-gun/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-mari0-mario-with-a-portal-gun http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/03/12/free-mari0-mario-with-a-portal-gun/#comments Mon, 12 Mar 2012 15:01:39 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1472

Every now and then, indie game makers bring something new to us gamers sick and tired of the commercial industry’s logic of safety. Everything seems to be become a first-person shooter – even classics like Syndicate, Fallout and Jagged Alliance have gone that way, despite their successes as isometric games. This time, stick it [...]]]>

Every now and then, indie game makers bring something new to us gamers sick and tired of the commercial industry’s logic of safety. Everything seems to be become a first-person shooter – even classics like Syndicate, Fallout and Jagged Alliance have gone that way, despite their successes as isometric games. This time, stick it to StabYourself to come out with a game that is a mish-mash between Portal and Mario. This platformer is a unique game, and by default, it comes with both Super Mario Bros levels as well as Portal levels, so you can play a Mario-with-a-Portal-gun game or Portal-with-Mario. There’s also the ability to create your own levels if you’re willing, and despite the really retro interface, this game does have the means to connect to a server where you can find all the DLCs, as well as connect to other players so you can play Portal with others.

Now, a 2D version of Portal isn’t a new thing. A while ago, I reviewed a Flash version of Portal, which is basically similar to this, except it was higher res and less cute. This, however, is a lower-res, cute-to-the-max, 8-bit screecher that is meant to tingle your senses with nostalgia, and the platformer does have some dynamism – as mentioned, you can play this as a full-blown Mario game who has a portal gun, or you can play it in a more serious Portal-only fashion.

Beginners beware: the lack of a save game function will force you to see this at the most unfortunate of times!

The game does have a few issues. Chief of which is aiming your Portal. The biggest issue lies in the fact that this game is windowed, so if you accidentally over-scroll, you will find yourself clicking on the desktop, which minimizes the game and makes you search for it. This is especially common when you’re trying to shoot portals. The programmers would do well making a scroll-limit, so you can actually shoot your portals without accidentally clicking outside of the game.

For a game that is less than 10mb, Mari0 has much to offer. It is absolutely compatible with Windows 7 and XP, and doesn’t require much of your computer for it to run smoothly. It’s a great time-waster, and you’ll thoroughly enjoy the time you spent on this game. Of course, a pet peeve would be having to restart the game all over again just because you lost your last life. That is truly ouch. I wasn’t too good with Mario, and didn’t know that turtle shells are skeeting battering rams – that took a few lives from me. Also,

Portal-with-Mario, instead of vice versa. A second mode of play.

I didn’t know that red lasers meant death and that blue lasers functioned the same way as platforms. Sounds absolutely noobed out, but that can happen Which leads me to highlight the next issue: the fact that you have only three lives to work with, which can make things tough on beginners who aren’t familiar with Portal or Mario. You’ll find that without a save game function, you’ll be losing lives really quickly as you find out how to tackle monsters/lasers/traps.

You can download the latest version here, for Linux, OSX and Windows.

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FREE: C&C: Tiberian Sun on a netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/03/11/free-cc-tiberian-sun-on-a-netbook/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-cc-tiberian-sun-on-a-netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/03/11/free-cc-tiberian-sun-on-a-netbook/#comments Sat, 10 Mar 2012 19:08:19 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1451 Who knew a company like EA would release so many classics to the public for absolutely free?

Well, they did, and Command and Conquer: Tiberian Sun is the last one which can be obtained free and absolutely legally. This game builds upon the original C&C and brings it to a new level of sophistication and [...]]]>

The final, free C&C game is one of the most memorable.

Who knew a company like EA would release so many classics to the public for absolutely free?

Well, they did, and Command and Conquer: Tiberian Sun is the last one which can be obtained free and absolutely legally. This game builds upon the original C&C and brings it to a new level of sophistication and depth. The game is highly exciting, and definitely something you want to try, especially since it’s absolutely free and pretty simple to install.

Just like the original C&C, the game is very similar – build a base, gather Tiberian, amass an army and then attempt to massacre your enemies. The game brings familiarity to people who have played the good ol’ games, whether it be Red Alert or the original C&C, both of which are free too, by the way.

The essential difference between this game and the original C&C is that it’s been complicated to good taste – you get more units, more buildings, and more ways to slaughter your enemies. For example, in the original C&C, you had the option of one superweapon. Now you have about three. Remember Tanya from Red Alert? In C&C: Tiberian Sun, you have Tanya-esque units, such as the Cyborg.

Tiberium Sun is a great game, especially so because it’s free and it’s quite engaging. One thing that I find a bit unfortunate has to be the lack of multiplayer capability. Out of the box, you are unable to play with your friends.

Now, my two cents. Since all three games are offered free, you do have a lot on your hands if you try to play all three at once. You’d miss work, lose your family and lose half your weight because you can’t get to the kitchen to cook. If you don’t want this to happen, however, I’d say that while Tiberian Sun is a great game, the original C&C is still a lot more engrossing than TS is.

My theory of why this is so lies in the fact that the original C&C is a much tougher game, where as Tiberian Sun is a game that follows a late-90′s-and-early-2000′s trend whereby games are gradually made easier and easier. In fact, the inclusion of a Skirmish mode just removes a large chunk of your impetus to play the Campaign – the slow, mission-by-mission release of stronger units, which keeps you addicted to playing the game just to see what cool toy you’ll have next.

Is it a bad game? No. It’s absolutely terrific. That’s why, if you’re bored, you should head over here and download it. Installation is pretty easy, you just have to copy the whole SUN folder onto somewhere in your hard drive and run SUN.exe. That will enable you access to both the original Tiberian Sun and Firestorm. It’s pretty much the easiest game to run among the three free games. In case you encounter an error stating that you are unable to open up the file, what you need is WinRAR, which you can download from here. Presumably, if you are running this on a netbook, you’d want to download the 32-bit version, that goes by the name WinRAR x86 (32-bit) x.xx.

Like

A great revamp of the C&C series with a lot of new units and new strategies.

Dislike

Graphics still looks like Gameboy Color

Not as engrossing as the first two C&Cs – IMHO, YMMV.

Verdict

Quite a sweet game for Skirmish, though campaign-wise, definitely try the first C&C.

Gameplay:  Great!

Graphics: Looks antiquated.

Work needed to get game to play: Minimal – extract a folder from the RAR and run the executable.

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FREE: C&C: Red Alert for your netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/02/23/free-cc-red-alert-for-your-netbook/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-cc-red-alert-for-your-netbook http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/02/23/free-cc-red-alert-for-your-netbook/#comments Wed, 22 Feb 2012 18:49:03 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1445 Well, well, well. Who knew that EA Games has decided to be so generous and release a good portion of its classics to the public for free. I recently got hold of the original C&C, and it really is an awesome game that plays excellent on [...]]]>

Still quite fun, actually

Well, well, well. Who knew that EA Games has decided to be so generous and release a good portion of its classics to the public for free. I recently got hold of the original C&C, and it really is an awesome game that plays excellent on a netbook after the installation of a patch. The next step would of course, be the next game in the C&C series – Red Alert.

Red Alert has large similarities to the original C&C, and yet, holds its own because of its updates to the game. While some units and buildings look the same, more units have been added, gameplay has been smoothened out and some buildings look different from what they looked like in C&C.

If you have played the original C&C, this game will not feel foreign at all. You start of with a MCV with an assortment of units – tanks and soldiers. You will go through the standard C&C cycle – build power plants, build buildings, harvest ore (the contemporary tiberium), build units, fight wars, repeat. By no means am I trying to lower the value of this game, however, although the game does feel easier than the original C&C, which was hard as nails because you always seemed handicapped against your computer opponent.

The game pits the Allies against the Soviet, much like the GDI vs NOD in the previous game. Throughout this, you’ll be fighting for territory, jostling for freedom and listening to briefings from a variety of continental Europeans with strong accents. However, if you’re not the type that likes to follow missions, C&C: Red Alert brings a new mode hidden under “Multiplayer Game” – the Skirmish mode – which allows you to access all that Red Alert can offer. I tried following the campaign, but since I only downloaded one CD (the Soviet disc), I couldn’t play past the first mission as the game requested me to insert the Allies CD (Disc 1).

Fix You

The game does have some bugs. The fact that this game was developed in 1996 causes some problems. Of course, when EA Games released this game to the public, they kindly put in a patch that brings the game up to date. Inside the RAR file, you will find the ISO, which you will need to either burn it on a CD or use Daemon Tools to run. Inside that same RAR file, you will find a patch, which will bring the game up to date, and allow you to play in on Windows 7… sort of.

There’s an official version of how to fix this included in the RAR, but if you just want an outline to avoid reading the whole drivel, here is my abridged version:

In order to get the installer to run, you will need to put  setup.exe into Windows 95 compatibility. And, to get the game up to date, you will need to copy the patch (from XP_Patch in the RAR) into the installation folder, run it, which will extract PATCH.EXE, and run that. Thereafter, I put the game into Windows 95 compatibility and all was fine and dandy.

Downloads

Here you go.

Red Alert Allied Disc

Red Alert Soviet Disc

 

Like

A real-world twist but old-C&C charm, coupled with some new units.

Addictive

Nostalgic

Dislike

Low-res. Oh god why.

Hell of a installation process

Verdict

Not bad, I’d say this is a close contender to C&C95, though it misses it by a few feet.

Gameplay:  Excellent.

Graphics: Low-res, but not critically important for a strategy game.

Work needed to get game to play: Some.

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FREE: Command and Conquer 95 – Tiberian Dawn http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/02/17/free-command-and-conquer-95-tiberian-dawn/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=free-command-and-conquer-95-tiberian-dawn http://netbookist.com/blog/2012/02/17/free-command-and-conquer-95-tiberian-dawn/#comments Thu, 16 Feb 2012 20:05:07 +0000 http://netbookist.com/?p=1430 After the last discovery of an online, browser-based version of Command and Conquer 95, later named Tiberian Dawn, I was quite keen on finding the full game, if only to relive my memories as a teen playing what is now one of the longest-running series in strategy games. I realized two things: there’s a bundle [...]]]>

The original C&C!

After the last discovery of an online, browser-based version of Command and Conquer 95, later named Tiberian Dawn, I was quite keen on finding the full game, if only to relive my memories as a teen playing what is now one of the longest-running series in strategy games. I realized two things: there’s a bundle that EA Games has released by the name of The First Decade and that most of what was released in the 90′s is now free.

Kane is evil. He also has Asian Glow.

C&C95 is one of the most basic strategy games around, you build buildings, which in turn builds your army. In the midst of all these, you have to build your defenses and build your army. The game puts you through a number of maps, and you’ll follow this game through the instructions of your commanding officer, a nice friendly guy who tells you the devious plans of the opposing force. The story is even more basic – a war between the Global Defense Initiative and the terrorist group called the Brotherhood of Nod. Both sides have their own unique units, although I’d say that the Nod side has always felt more powerful.

Despite this, I’d have to say that this game is one of the most addictive games you can play on your netbook. It is tough, challenging, exciting and sometimes frustrating. If you think games these days are a breeze, then you’ll have to try this game, as every map gives the computer a one-level-up handicap. With timely use of save games and smart strategies, however, you can defeat this game, although it might take many hours and attempts.

@fakeAndersonCooper is the GDI's commander

Unlike Red Alert and beyond, C&C95 does not have a Skirmish mode, which allows you access to all the game has to offer in a battle to the death. In C&C95, the game slowly ramps up, first allowing you to battle with infantry, then with tanks. At the same pace, more powerful buildings can be built. This is not exactly an issue, but if you’re used to the franchise, you’d be a bit disappointed with the lack of a Skirmish mode. Although, at the same time, I must say that this also adds to the game’s value – as every new mission brings you a new toy.

The catch with this free game is that EA Games didn’t update it such that it was compatible with modern computers. Nope, without any third-party mods, your eyes would be slogging it out at 640×480, and the game assumes you are using Windows 95, which causes compatibility problems, since most netbooks are probably using Windows 7.

That’s not really a problem, because that can be fixed.

Where download?

Download them here,

Command and Conquer 95 GDI Disc

Command and Conquer 95 NOD Disc

As these files are in the ISO form, you will have to have some sort of way of putting it on a CD – either virtually or otherwise. You can burn the image via an image burner or just use Daemon Tools. They’re about 500mb each.

Before you know it, you'd have spent your whole day trying to complete the tough as nails missions.

Fixes?

In order to play the game, you’ll have to install a simple, EXE patch.  You can get the patch here, although you might want to visit the author’s site as he has more mods that will allow you to extend the capabilities of the game.

 

Like

So addictive.

So challenging (a rarity in games today)

So 90′s

Dislike

Can be hard as nails; frustrating as f***

No Skirmish mode

Verdict

Gonna fly trans-Atlantic? This game will distract you for hours and hours on end.

Gameplay:  Excellent

Graphics: Looks old. Good ol’ at that.

Work needed to get game to play: Some – ISO file and fix needed to play.

 

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