Need for Speed Undercover returns
to its roots with hokey cut scenes, wild cop chases, and solid racing action.
The Need for Speed series got
another dose of Hollywood magic with the release of Undercover. Take on jobs
and compete in races to prove yourself as you infiltrate and take down an
international crime syndicate.
As you win each race, you’ll go
deeper into the underworld web that rules Tri-City and then tear it apart right
under their noses. You make the calls, but don’t break your cover: inside the
car or out of it, one mistake here could be your last.
For the most part, the reaction
to the last few Need for Speed games was the same: "Why aren't they more
like Need for Speed Most Wanted?" "Where are the cheesy cutscenes and
the over the top cop chases?" It seems as if EA heard those cries, because
for better or for worse, Need for Speed Undercover feels like Most Wanted.
In Undercover you play the role
of wait for it an undercover officer. Along with agent Chase Linh, played by
the attractive Maggie Q, your job is to take down a group of street racers that
have somehow become involved in an international smuggling ring. The story is
told via campy cutscenes that fail to capture the charm of Most Wanted thanks
to uninteresting characters and a predictable plot. Having a story provides
incentive to make it through race after race, but the whole "this is cheesy
so it's cool" thing feels kind of forced this time around.
It won't be easy we'll have to
use our powers of acting to take down the street racers.
Like many other Need for Speed
games, all of your racing will take place on the streets of a fictitious open world
city here it's the Tri City Bay area. You'll start with a lousy vehicle, but it
won't be long before you're able to snag a pink slip to a nicer ride. As you
progress you'll earn cash, which can be used to unlock (50+) new vehicles from
manufacturers such as Nissan, Dodge, Cadillac, Ford, Porsche, Lamborghini, BMW,
Aston Martin, Mitsubishi, and more. If you're into tuning individual aspects of
your ride or purchasing individual parts you can do that, but if you're not
into tinkering you can purchase an upgrade package and be on your way.
Not only will you earn money for
winning an event, you'll earn driving points for dominating it basically
beating it really, really bad. You can power up a number of your driving
attributes, but they don't have a noticeable effect on how your car handles. As
long as you drive fast you'll probably dominate, but there are occasional races
where you'll totally obliterate the time needed to dominate an event, but
you'll still lose to the CPU. The game also encourages you to drive with style
and drift, draft, and drive really close to other cars, but other than
increasing your nitrous there's little to gain from doing so. That said, the
new J-Turn mechanic, which lets you bust quick 180s, is invaluable when chasing
down rivals or evading the cops. You'll use it because it's useful, though, not
because it gets you heroic driving points.
www.softhitz.blogspot.com the
cops are back in full effect in Undercover, and for the most part, their return
is welcome. The challenges in which you must ram and take out a certain number
of police cars are great fun, as are the challenges where you must cause a
certain monetary sum of damage. Of course, you don't always have to ram cars to
take them down; you can also run into log trucks, electrical towers,
billboards, and more to leave a little surprise for your pursuers. It's too bad
that some odd quirks hamper the cop chases. The environmental hazards that you
can unleash certainly look cool and are effective, but quite often you won't see
any police cars get hit by the objects, yet when the cutscene ends the cars are
trashed. Sometimes you won't have to do anything at all to evade police the
game says "go" and you stay still and nobody finds you. Cops are
capable of laying down spikes, but you can go the entire game without them ever
doing so. The biggest problem, however, is that the cops don't do much other
than bang on the side of your car and yell at you, so if you last long enough
they sort of fade away on their own. This makes the chases less challenging
than they could have been and also makes them feel artificial, like you're just
fulfilling some sort of time requirement until the game decides you've done
well enough to escape.
Need for Speed Undercover isn't
just about messing with the Man. There are events where you need to maintain a
lead for a specific amount of time or get a certain distance ahead of your
opponent. Sometimes you'll have to shake the cops while trying to keep a stolen
ride in pristine condition, and there are checkpoint races and circuit races as
well. There's not a whole lot that's original here and the races are generally
extremely easy you might not see another car for an entire race once you've
cleared the starting line. They're difficult on occasion, but this is usually
because of the choppy frame rate, which is often dreadful on the PlayStation 3.
It's not as if Xbox 360 owners are getting a smooth, fast frame rate, but it's
significantly better than the PS3's slide show, which is often so bad that it
makes the otherwise great handling vehicles a chore to drive. What's odd is
that there's really no obvious reason for the game's poor frame rate; the city
doesn't look much different than those in Need for Speed Carbon and Need for
Speed Most Wanted, and the car models have aliasing issues.
You might not want to crash into
a cop car in real life, but here, it's all good.
That said, the game does do a few
things very well. The online cops and robbers mode, where the robber tries to
pick up money and take it to a drop off point while another person plays the
cop and tries to ram them, is quite a bit of fun. But mostly what the game gets
right is its pacing. The races are short sometimes as short as 20 seconds, and
almost never longer than five minutes. Another cool thing the game does is it
lets you instantly jump to the closest race by pressing down on the D pad. If
you want to find a specific event you can press up and you're taken to a GPS
map, where you can instantly go to the race of your choice. It'll save you a lot
of needless backtracking, and combined with the short races, makes sure that
Undercover never gets boring.
If you're one of the many people
who loved Need for Speed Most Wanted, flaws and all, you'll find a lot to like
in Undercover. It's not very original and the slow frame rate is a downer, but
there's no denying that it's just good fun to run from the cops and wreak havoc
on a city in the process.
INSTRUCTIONS
- Extract with WinRAR
- Click on setu.bat file and wait 15 minute
- when every thing completed
- so click on nfs.exe
- and play game
- if in play time game stopped and give any error
- so open crack folder and copy nfs.exe file and paste it in game Install folder.
- and Relaunch your game
- now it will work perfect
- Enjoy
Processor=
Pentium 4, 2.4GHz
RAM=
512MB
Video
Memory= 256MB
Size=
1.09GB
This is Torrent Download File, You must be Install uTorrent in you Computer
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