Scarface - THE WORLD IS YOURS PC Game Full Version Free Download

Scarface - The World is Yours Once you
get over the whole rewriting-the-end-of-the-movie thing, Scarface: The World Is
Yours is a competent but usually uninteresting action game.
Hey,
remember the movie Scarface? How about that ending, with Tony Montana taking on
an army of thugs with his "little friend" and managing to kill most
of them...except for the guy creeping up from behind with a double-barreled
shotgun? Guess he didn't see that coming. Too bad they didn't leave it open for
a sequel, because the continuing adventures of Tony Montana probably would have
been pretty cool.
Coke deals
and other character interactions are often governed by a golflike meter.
Slight
variations on that conversation have probably happened thousands of times since
the 1983 release of Scarface, which featured Al Pacino as a tough-talking
up-and-coming crime lord who makes a fortune dealing cocaine in Miami, only to
lose it all by taking his eye off the ball and becoming way too focused on
getting high on his own supply. Through the power of video game magic, Sierra
and Radical Entertainment have teamed up to answer the question: What would
have happened to Tony Montana if he had escaped from the mansion? What about
his empire? And the video game answer to that question is that he'd lose it all
and have to perform a number of Grand Theft Auto-like tasks to get it back.
Rewriting
the ending to a movie just so you can justify a sequel is a tough pill to
swallow, especially when you're dealing with an ending as memorable as the one
in Scarface. It's likely that some fans of the film will never be able to get
over that hump and will despise the game for existing in the first place. But if
you can deal with that concept--you'll take control of Montana shortly after
the "say hello to my little friend" line and orchestrate his getaway
yourself--you'll find a foul-mouthed and bloody adventure that does next to
nothing with the characters. In the film, you saw Tony Montana grow from a
simple refugee to the king of the coke world. In the game, the shock of losing
his empire causes Tony to clean up his act and get off the yayo so he can start
dealing again. Then you basically kill everyone who wronged you, all while
talking about the need to have balls. The whole experience feels flat and often
self-conscious. It's like the makers of the game watched the movie, picked out
a few common words that Tony Montana would say (cock-a-roach, balls, f***, chico,
and coño), and then set about writing dialogue that uses those words as often
as possible.
It might
not feel terribly true to the spirit of the film, but as a game, Scarface is
functional. You're given the open city of Miami to drive around right off the
bat, though you'll be doing business in only one part of the city at a time.
You start in Little Havana, and your goal is to take back that part of town so
you can deal cocaine unabated by the other dealers that have risen during your
three-month absence. You take back the streets by going to war with gangs that
have taken up residence in various parts of the neighborhood. These gangs are
denoted by a skull on your map, and your task here is to roll up to the thugs,
open fire, and not stop shooting until they're all dead. You'll also need to
buy businesses in each part of town, mainly so that you can use them as drug
fronts, and you won't able to advance the story if you don't. But you can't
just waltz in and buy each business right away. Business owners have specific
tasks that you must complete before they'll sell. That means you'll have to go
on a mission. Some of the missions make perfect sense and fit with something
Tony Montana would do, like defending a restaurant from attackers. Another has
you guarding a speedboat from a fixed gun position on a helicopter while it
tries to find shark fins to make shark-fin soup for a wedding party at another
restaurant. The slightly goofy missions conspire to make the whole game feel
disjointed and flippant.
In addition
to the main process of completing missions and buying front businesses, there's
the more open-ended goal of making money and building a reputation. You have a
reputation level that increases for a variety of different reasons, including
completing missions, and you won't be able to take on some missions unless your
reputation is at a certain level. If you need to earn a lot of rep, that might
mean you go several hours without progressing the story because you need to
earn money to purchase junk for your mansion, which raises your rep and also
gives you access to the stupidly named "pimp my mansion" feature.
The life
of a coke dealer is a dangerous one, but death in this game usually doesn't
have much of a consequence.
Or, you
can just go on what seems like an infinite number of side missions to help out
coke suppliers, usually by defending them from attackers for a minute or two.
Once that's done, you can get connected with the suppliers and purchase
cocaine. Grams can be dealt on your own to street dealers or through your front
businesses, though the street dealers usually give you more money for your
product. As you move up the food chain and take over entire neighborhoods, you
get access to supply warehouses. Around that point, you can start buying by the
kilo and store those fat keys of powder in your warehouse. Once you've stored
some coke, you can then go on a distribution mission, which has you drive
around to your various front businesses, ostensibly to deliver the coke you've
accumulated. But all you really do is drive around and run over boxes that give
you money. During this process, gangs will show up and attempt to attack or
take out your front businesses, but they're never too hard to deal with.
Completing distribution is a great way to earn a lot of cash...dirty cash.
The game
keeps track of two different sums of money. Your cash on hand is treated as
dirty money, and when you die, you lose all the grams and dirty money on your
person. The only way to protect your money is to go to a bank and launder it,
which also lets you save your game. The laundering process isn't automatic,
though. Whenever you go to deposit your cash, a golf swing-style meter appears
with various percentages on it. That percentage is how much of a cut the bank
will take for cleaning up your cash flow. You need to hold down a button to
start the meter moving and let off when it reaches a success zone at the end to
get the lowest rate. This same meter shows up throughout the game and is used
to intimidate gangs, fast-talk your way past police, sell grams of coke to
dealers, and even disarm bombs. It's a clever system that makes you feel like
you're actually working to accomplish these tasks, rather than just pressing a
button, though it's not very hard, and you'll rarely fail once you get the hang
of it. There are two other factors that impact some of these meters. Your heat
with local gangs has an impact on how much money you'll get for selling coke to
dealers, and your heat with the police has an effect on the percentage the
banks will offer to launder your cash. You can pay either of them down with
bribes, though the best way to deal with the police is to not attract their
attention in the first place.
This may
be the only game around that features something called a balls upgrade.
One of the
most exhilarating parts of any Grand Theft Auto-style game is the ability to
get out in the middle of the street, arm yourself to the teeth, and start going
crazy. Scarface doesn't let you do that, because not only can you not pull the
trigger when pointing at any civilian (the game likes to repeat the "I
don't need that s*** in my life" line from the movie when you try to blast
innocent people), but you also can't get into a protracted standoff with the
police. As you do dirt in a visible manner, such as shooting it out with gangs
in the streets or even getting into a lot of hit-and-run accidents, a meter
starts to slowly fill up. If it gets full, the police show up on the scene. If
they don't see you shooting, you might be able to put away your gun and
sweet-talk the law into leaving. Or, you might just have to get away. The meter
then becomes a timer that slowly drains, and you absolutely must get away from
the police in a fast car. If you don't get away before time expires, the game
lamely proclaims "you are f***ed," and shots ring out from nowhere,
killing you almost instantly. There doesn't seem to be any way to fight your
way out of this situation. You truly are "f***ed." It's interesting
that someone tried to come up with a new way to deal with the police in a Grand
Theft Auto clone, but this method isn't any fun at all.
That
applies to much of the game, really. Most of the missions aren't much fun,
either, though at least the act of firing a gun is handled well and surprisingly
bloody. Comical, Mortal Kombat-like streams of blood blast out of just about
any person you shoot, especially if you blow someone's head off. You can lock
on and target enemies, and then use the right analog stick to refine that aim
for headshots and so on. But once you start getting AK-47s and other
high-powered weapons, locking on seems like a waste of time. You can just aim
at head height, hold down the trigger, and sweep across a row of enemies to
wipe them all out immediately. Plus, shooting without locking on is a more
effective way to earn "balls," which is a rage meter. When your balls
gauge is full, you can go into a blind-rage mode that takes the game first
person for a bit. While in rage mode, you autotarget enemies, which makes them
extremely easy to kill. Also, each kill causes you to regain some of your health,
making it a useful feature.
Multiplatform
games that appear on both consoles and the PC can be a real crapshoot, and the
PC version is usually the one that ends up suffering. That's the case with
Scarface for the PC, which has the same menus and controls as the console
version. It has been poorly adapted to work with a mouse and keyboard, and the
mouse aiming never feels smooth. Even more telling is the cheat-code entry
screen, which still requires you to scroll through letters to spell out the
cheat, rather than letting you type it in.
Graphically,
the PC version suffers when compared to the Xbox version, let alone when
compared to modern PC games. Even on machines that go way beyond the game's
recommended system requirements, we noticed plenty of frame-rate trouble and
slowdown. The textures aren't pretty, and overall, the game looks like a quick and
dirty console port.
After
taking over a couple of neighborhoods, you'll have to visit some of the
surrounding islands via boat.
The audio
side of the game is all over the place. While the first credit in the game
might say Al Pacino right on the screen, that's just because the character
looks like the original Tony Montana. The final credit, however, is the credit
for the voice actor portraying the lead character by doing his best Tony
Montana impression. He's pretty good, and just like in the movie, most of his
lines are absolutely packed with cursing. And just as the movie was back when
it was new, this may be one of the most curse-filled games around. The rest of
the voice cast is full of fairly big names that don't necessarily sound like
the sort of names you'd want in a Scarface game, like Bam Margera and Jason
Mewes. For the most part, the voices are fine, though the character Mewes (Jay
of Jay and Silent Bob fame) plays shouts "die, fat a**, die!" at one
point. Who thought working in a fairly obscure Mallrats reference was a good
idea? Tony Montana isn't even fat! The rest of the sound effects are as you'd
expect. There are good gunshot effects, and the car engines sound decent. The
game makes good use of surround-sound setups, especially on the Xbox. The
soundtrack is pretty long and contains songs from the movie as well as a bunch
of newer stuff from acts like LL Cool J and Cypress Hill, though much of it
isn't very effective at setting the appropriate mood, and at its default
setting, the music is usually a bit too loud, drowning out important sound
effects or character speech.
Overall,
Scarface: The World Is Yours is more a victim of some poor design choices than
any glaring technical issues. The developers accomplished the task of bringing
Tony Montana back to life. But by taking the focus off of the gameplay elements
that you'd want in an open-city game and putting it more on the game's bland
mission design and all the dull side tasks you'll have to do to earn a
reputation, Scarface doesn't play to its potential strengths. The end result is
a functional game that presents an interesting premise, but underneath you'll
find a wholly uninteresting game.
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