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PRODUCT PRESENTATION

Boxart: Bioshock
Pegi-18+ESRB-M-17+descr
Blood and Gore, Drug Reference, Intense Violence, Sexual Themes, Strong Language

Bioshock

Rating: 4.8 (5 votes cast)
Windows logo

System requirements

  • Operating System: Windows XP (with Service Pack 2) or Windows Vista
  • CPU: Intel single-core Pentium 4 processor at 2.4GHz System RAM: 1 GB
  • Video Card: Direct X 9.0c compliant video card with 128MB RAM and Pixel Shader 3.0 (NVIDIA 6600 or better/ATI X1300 or better, excluding ATI X1550)
  • Sound Card: 100% direct X 9.0c compatible sound card
  • 8GB of free hard drive space.
  • 95%

    IMAGES

    FEATURES

    BioShock is a shooter unlike any you've ever played, loaded with weapons and tactics never seen. You'll have a complete arsenal at your disposal from simple revolvers to grenade launchers and chemical throwers, but you'll also be forced to genetically modify your DNA to create an even more deadly weapon: you. Injectable plasmids give you super human powers: blast electrical currents into water to electrocute multiple enemies, or freeze them solid and obliterate them with the swing of a wrench.

    No encounter ever plays out the same, and no two gamers will play the game the same way.

    • Biologically modify your body: send fire storming from your fingertips and unleash a swarm of killer hornets hatched from the veins in your arms.
    • Hack devices and systems, upgrade your weapons and craft new ammo variants.
    • Turn everything into a weapon: the environment, your body, fire and water, and even your worst enemies.
    • Explore an incredible and unique art deco world hidden deep under the ocean.

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    GAME DOCUMENTS BY CUSTOMERS

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    REVIEWED BY CRISPY GAMER

    Next stop: 30,000 fathoms. All aboard.

    Written by Scott Jones 2008-01-31

    Hot: Unique setting; Bold take on the increasingly dull FPS genre; Engrossing storyline; Manages to be both cerebral and visceral at once

    Not: Somewhat tepid third act; Devoid of multiplayer

    Zeus Dreams Do Come True: Ability to throw honest-to-god lightning from our fingertips.Much ink -- virtual and actual -- was spilled before BioShock's release. It's the game that launched a thousand blog posts, the game that made critics go wide-eyed during demos, the game that looked like it might even become the-little-game-that-could and maybe, just maybe, trip up the cocky Halo 3 on its way to its preordered/preordained victory lap. Now that it's out, it's safe to say that BioShock is indeed one of the great games of all time. No, it's not the gift from the gods that some of us -- OK, all of us -- hoped it would be; it's not perfection in disc form.Nor is it the far-too-easy, multiplayer-less, overrated, overproduced debacle that those in the backlash community -- and you know who are -- would have us believe.No matter who you are or what you believe in, if you are a gamer, then you simply must recognize BioShock as an important moment in our medium -- a moment in which, amidst...

    Read full review at Crispy Gamer

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