Hobble hat geschrieben:
Ein einziges Mal "musste" ich bisher 3 Leute umbringen.
Das Leveldesign ist bisher aber verdammt geil (<- das wichtigste!)
Hobble hat geschrieben:
Ein einziges Mal "musste" ich bisher 3 Leute umbringen.
Benutze den Stick?Farang hat geschrieben:so schnell gehe ich gar nicht wie ich finde ..nu hab ich aber nen anderes problem.
spiele ja mit der wiiu version..wenn ich die heftkamera werfe wirft er die linse in meiner richtung bzw die gegner sind nicht im blickfeld....müsste jetzt das wiiupad steuern mit der gyroskopie aber da muss ich mich im sessel einmal um 180grad drehen damit ich die gegner aufn pad zu sehen bekomme ..sieht dof aus wenn ich mich im sessel um 180grad drehe ....gibst da keine andere möglichkeit ?
Splinter Cell: Blacklist - the Digital Foundry verdict
Almost every quad-format Face-Off to date has unearthed compromises in the Wii U release which eclipses its advantages, and Splinter Cell: Blacklist doesn't buck this trend. Taken from an image resolution standpoint, the Wii U version is no doubt the reigning king of its domain, where unlike the Sony and Microsoft platform releases, it achieves a full 720p with v-sync always engaged. As a result, it's Nintendo's hardware that gives us the clearest and most integral image of the three, while the 360 and PS3 versions trail behind with sub-HD presentations, with the PlayStation 3 coming off as particularly blurry.
But there are gripes to consider before jumping in bed with the Wii U version. Most significant is the degradation in texture quality, the muddiness of which matches the 360 release without its HD texture pack install. Surfaces can look flat compared to the game running on PS3 and 360 with full installs, and the lack of any similar optional install on Nintendo's platform means pop-in flares up while in wide outdoors areas. Curiously, in terms of sheer playability, Sony's hardware achieves the most consistent frame-rates during combat, with 360 taking middle ground here, and the Wii U suffering from more regular dips to the low 20s, perhaps explaining the omission of split-screen gameplay.
All in all, Ubisoft Toronto's debut stealth-em-up has us talking in circles when tasked with pinning down one definitive version - accepting the PC version with tessellation, TXAA and higher-grade ambient occlusion as the obvious response. Looking purely at the console trio, there's no denying that tearing on PS3 and 360 is overbearing in this case, though these have been optimised with fast loading times, and higher quality assets missing from Wii U. The pristine presentation of this Wii U version is a major plus meanwhile, and extra GamePad features such as off-screen play and an intuitive grid system for selecting weapons are considerable, tangible pluses.
However, the Wii U's lower frame-rates, patience-testing loading screens and occasional freezing issues can't be ignored either, meaning we'd advise caution before buying this version. It feels rushed to market in these respects, and until a worthy patch arrives, the contest must be narrowed down to PS3 and 360 - a stalemate that itself can only be broken via your preference for either visual fidelity or performance.
http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/digit ... t-face-offSplinter Cell: Blacklist - the Digital Foundry verdict
Almost every quad-format Face-Off to date has unearthed compromises in the Wii U release which eclipses its advantages, and Splinter Cell: Blacklist doesn't buck this trend. Taken from an image resolution standpoint, the Wii U version is no doubt the reigning king of its domain, where unlike the Sony and Microsoft platform releases, it achieves a full 720p with v-sync always engaged. As a result, it's Nintendo's hardware that gives us the clearest and most integral image of the three, while the 360 and PS3 versions trail behind with sub-HD presentations, with the PlayStation 3 coming off as particularly blurry.
But there are gripes to consider before jumping in bed with the Wii U version. Most significant is the degradation in texture quality, the muddiness of which matches the 360 release without its HD texture pack install. Surfaces can look flat compared to the game running on PS3 and 360 with full installs, and the lack of any similar optional install on Nintendo's platform means pop-in flares up while in wide outdoors areas. Curiously, in terms of sheer playability, Sony's hardware achieves the most consistent frame-rates during combat, with 360 taking middle ground here, and the Wii U suffering from more regular dips to the low 20s, perhaps explaining the omission of split-screen gameplay.
All in all, Ubisoft Toronto's debut stealth-em-up has us talking in circles when tasked with pinning down one definitive version - accepting the PC version with tessellation, TXAA and higher-grade ambient occlusion as the obvious response. Looking purely at the console trio, there's no denying that tearing on PS3 and 360 is overbearing in this case, though these have been optimised with fast loading times, and higher quality assets missing from Wii U. The pristine presentation of this Wii U version is a major plus meanwhile, and extra GamePad features such as off-screen play and an intuitive grid system for selecting weapons are considerable, tangible pluses.
However, the Wii U's lower frame-rates, patience-testing loading screens and occasional freezing issues can't be ignored either, meaning we'd advise caution before buying this version. It feels rushed to market in these respects, and until a worthy patch arrives, the contest must be narrowed down to PS3 and 360 - a stalemate that itself can only be broken via your preference for either visual fidelity or performance.