Organized by William Devlin, the Free World Alliance has initiated an elaborate mission objective involving the infiltration of the Cyberia Complex located in Russia. Assuming the role of the reformed hacker, you rendezvous with Santos and his gang of mercenaries in the North Atlantic. From there, you pilot the highly advanced TF TransFighter aircraft and descend into the frozen wasteland. Developed by Xatrix Entertainment and published by Interplay Productions, Cyberia combines third-person adventure elements with high-energy, first-person action sequences via aircraft.
Gameplay is broken into two parts: walking around and shooting scenarios. This system allows Zak to use infrared and thermal scanning for the detection of enemies, Magnetic Resonance Imaging MRI that examines items and BioScanning for organic matters. Zak must use these resources in moderation because when the three functions are executed, they slowly drain the battery system. It does, however, recharge over time. While maneuvering the character through the complex base levels, you must be on the lookout for potential hazards.
After encountering a batch of enemies, you find yourself immersed in a heated gunbattle. Instead of using a free-movement system, the developers opted for nodal advancements, meaning you point-and-click your way through certain paths that lead to different points. Additionally, there are non-player characters located throughout the world with which to converse and gather clues.
The airborne portion of the game involves navigating the not-so-friendly skies in the TF TransFighter. Interplay had a serious hit on its hands earlier this year with this futuristic action R. PG and before you know it, you'll be able to take part in the action on your Sega Saturn. The year is and it's five years after the global economic collapse what took it so long? You are Zak, a hacker who's about to pay the ultimate debt for his crimes: he's on death row, awaiting execution.
As if that weren't a heavy enough load to bear, you must travel through cyberspace to the secret installation known as Cyberia. There you must find a secret weapon, a weapon so powerful it might just usher in the end of the world. Not only are you about to get fried for "information crime" you have to save the world too. Cyberia is a combination of straight-ahead role playing and arcade action.
As Zak, you must interact with other characters in a dangerous future world as well as fly combat missions. Interplay has done a fine job porting over its PC game, so Saturn owners should prepare themselves: We've seen the future and it looks really grim but grim in a cool, next-generation-videogame-system kind of way. While a lot of details are still sketchy, from these pictures, it looks like Cyberia could be a great game.
Tune to us in the near future for more info on this upcoming soft. Part shooter, and part puzzler, Cyberia is all adventure. Although this PC port looks super cool, it lacks replayability. You assume the role of Zack, a futuristic tough guy whose mission is to infiltrate a base known as Cyberia. The multigenre gameplay includes cockpit shooting similiar to Starblade , pistol dueling while exploring on foot, and puzzle solving in the spirit of Myst.
The intense environment often leads to instant death, but unlimited continues help you beat the game. The puzzles are only a mystery once, though, and one play-through would be enough for most gamers. Exploring with Zack is a slow process. The directional controls are initially confusing and annoying.
Also, during the cockpit sequences, you can lose track of your cross hair in the flashy firefights. Graphically, this almost fully rendered game delivers crisp character images and breathtaking backgrounds. The flat explosions, however, don't quite fit with the rendered look. With little music, the game's subtle background effects really enhance the overall sonic experience. You hear such nuances as the hum of an engine inside the base. If you want shooting or adventure, stick to basics like Doom or Gex.
In a tundra of genre-specific games, however, Cyberia comes in like a heat wave for the renaissance gamer who wants a little bit of everything.
Adventure games are a flighty genre. Anyone who hates action games should definitely steer clear of this underdog, but action veterans and patient adventurers will have a lot to like in Cyberia. Just be prepared to invest a lot of time and patience in this one. Thumbs up! Screenshots from MobyGames.
LoganBR 0 point. When I was in a middle school father bought Samsung magic station 1 or 3 or maybe both. It was the bundle game with the PC. I enjoyed playing that game and couldn't clear up to much far though. At least I could've remember the kiss scene and the puzzle at the very first one. It was such a sensational graphic in those days as long as I remember and ahead of time.
But also I felt something to scary and chilled atmosphere. Anyway all in one, it was great! MAVLL 2 points. Any of you manage to sucefully install the game?. Its easy to install. So Dont Worry. Lily53 0 point. Glorykid -1 point. Glorykid -4 points. Intubator -1 point. I remember this game from when I was a kid, used to play it at a friends house. Downloaded it, but I can't seem to manage to install it, an error message saying I don't have enough space appears. Any suggestions?
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