Review
When video and computer games make their ways to handheld platforms, it's hardly a surprise that drastic changes have to be made. More often than not, Game Boy Advance games with a console or computer counterpart bear little or no resemblance to the other versions of the game. But that's starting to change. Games like Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 for the GBA showed that it's possible to keep the same basic gameplay and level design intact. All it really did was present the same action from a different perspective. And that's precisely what Mobius and Rockstar have done with Max Payne for the GBA. The same basic action and level structure are intact from the original PC version, but it's all seen from an isometric perspective. Unfortunately, this Max Payne serves better as an incredibly neat idea than as a full-fledged game.

This is the original Max Payne, not a handheld rendition of the recently released Max Payne 2, so it follows the plot of the original game. Max is a New York cop whose wife and baby daughter were brutally murdered by junkies. He's since gone undercover to try to get to the bottom of the city's organized crime problem, but thanks to being at the wrong place at the wrong time, Max's cover is blown, and he's been framed for murder. What follows is Max's violent trek through the criminal underworld. He's still trying to solve the same crime, but with his true identity out in the open and every cop in New York after him, his tactics have changed to "shoot first, ask questions later."
Max Payne's story is told in a comic book-style format that runs through a series of still images. The images are subtitled with story text, but they're also spoken. There's a lot of dialogue in Max Payne's cutscenes, and the GBA plays it all. The original game also used a lot of voice during the game itself, but this speech has been replaced by onscreen text. Either way, Max Payne's story is an interesting one. It's well-told and contains a good amount of twists and turns. This helps make up for the game's rather short length. The GBA version is even shorter than the original, as a couple of levels have been cut. For example, the game skips the intro gameplay sequence, where Max discovers that his family has been slain. The dream sequences have also been cut. In both cases, the cutscenes that originally surrounded the missing sequences simply move the story along, so you don't really notice any holes where there used to be gameplay.
See more review on gamespot
By Jeff Gerstmann
Download Game:
Click Here part 1
Click Here part 2
Password : linkexpert
When video and computer games make their ways to handheld platforms, it's hardly a surprise that drastic changes have to be made. More often than not, Game Boy Advance games with a console or computer counterpart bear little or no resemblance to the other versions of the game. But that's starting to change. Games like Tony Hawk's Pro Skater 2 for the GBA showed that it's possible to keep the same basic gameplay and level design intact. All it really did was present the same action from a different perspective. And that's precisely what Mobius and Rockstar have done with Max Payne for the GBA. The same basic action and level structure are intact from the original PC version, but it's all seen from an isometric perspective. Unfortunately, this Max Payne serves better as an incredibly neat idea than as a full-fledged game.
This is the original Max Payne, not a handheld rendition of the recently released Max Payne 2, so it follows the plot of the original game. Max is a New York cop whose wife and baby daughter were brutally murdered by junkies. He's since gone undercover to try to get to the bottom of the city's organized crime problem, but thanks to being at the wrong place at the wrong time, Max's cover is blown, and he's been framed for murder. What follows is Max's violent trek through the criminal underworld. He's still trying to solve the same crime, but with his true identity out in the open and every cop in New York after him, his tactics have changed to "shoot first, ask questions later."
Max Payne's story is told in a comic book-style format that runs through a series of still images. The images are subtitled with story text, but they're also spoken. There's a lot of dialogue in Max Payne's cutscenes, and the GBA plays it all. The original game also used a lot of voice during the game itself, but this speech has been replaced by onscreen text. Either way, Max Payne's story is an interesting one. It's well-told and contains a good amount of twists and turns. This helps make up for the game's rather short length. The GBA version is even shorter than the original, as a couple of levels have been cut. For example, the game skips the intro gameplay sequence, where Max discovers that his family has been slain. The dream sequences have also been cut. In both cases, the cutscenes that originally surrounded the missing sequences simply move the story along, so you don't really notice any holes where there used to be gameplay.
See more review on gamespot
By Jeff Gerstmann
Download Game:
Click Here part 1
Click Here part 2
Password : linkexpert