Sin | 
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| From: Activision Category: Video Games
Buy Used: $0.01
New (5) Used (13) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 1 reviews Sales Rank: 16927
Format: Cd-rom Platforms: Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows 95 ESRB: Mature Media: CD-ROM Age: 17 - 20 years Operating System: Windows 2000 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.1 Dimensions (in): 9.5 x 7.9 x 1.8
UPC: 047875100763 EAN: 0047875100763 ASIN: B00001R3XH
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review At first glance Sin looks like weird mix of Quake, Resident Evil, and Half-Life; at second glance, that's still about right. There's nothing terribly original about Sin, and the graphics and character modeling are rather cliched, even for a 3-D action shooter. The females, for example, make Lara Croft look like she hasn't yet hit puberty. They're certainly some 13-year-old's grotesquely distorted idea of forbidden female eroticism. This kind of aesthetic pervades the entire game and might give the average player a slight case of the heebie-jeebies. This aside, there's plenty of shooting, pummeling, and ass kicking for those who want to get down to business--in the style of Quake--and lots of cabinets to open and handles to pull, a la Duke Nukem 3D or Resident Evil. For all its retreading of familiar ground, Sin is, on the whole, reasonably satisfying, and the death match, not too shabby at all. Escaping from the ordinary isn't the only challenge that Sin faces. The developers seemed to run out of Q&A folks: the multiplayer mode works fine, but there are definite bugs in the single-player version, and the loading time for some of the modules is not quite acceptable. Bottom line--a good ride for hard-core action shooters, but a pass for gamers possessed of a more discriminating palate. --Tamara Hladik
Amazon.com Product Description You are Colonel John R. Blade, who single-handedly restored order to Freeport in 2087, when the police force was dismantled. Now you face a new evil: Elexis Sinclaire has begun to biologically alter the streets of the city. Her mission to create genetically engineered mutants starts with the DNA altering drug, Dyforsanide. Blade uses hard-core weaponry to infiltrate the drug circuit and bring the brilliant biochemist to justice.
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| Customer Reviews:
Great testosterone fuelled low-brow fun. January 19, 2007 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
This game came out right around the same time that Half-Life did and decided to take the competition head on, including various jabs at Valve in the game itself. Unfortunately I don't think they really knew what they were up against. Where Half-Life had richly imagined interactive alien environments and a mysterious story that pulled you relentlessly through the satisfyingly lengthy gameplay, SiN had over the top b-movie machismo, a comicly villanous antagonist with a super-abundance of polygonal cleavage, cheesy dialogue and slightly buggy gameplay. I love them both to be honest, but whereas I've play HL through no less than 10 times I can't say I've played SiN through more than twice. Once properly patched, the game is fun, but still feels as though the developers reach exceeded their grasp. I like the large number of secrets included, including secret levels, and the fun items like being able to transfer all the money from the villains account into your own on the bank level. The overt sexism revealed in some of the "Secret" areas of the game feels like something a College Freshman would have reveled in when first away from home, but that said; it is refreshing to have a game that's not frighted of being somewhat offensive for the purposes of entertainment.
All in all it's worth playing, and I think you can get it free with SiN Episodes now off Steam for a very attractive price. Boo yah!
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