Bully : Scholarship Edition (1 DVD)

Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Tropico 4 - 1DVD

Price: Rp.7 500




The highly controversial sandbox game developed by Rockstar initially for the PlayStation 2 has found its way, after a two years long wait, on PC systems. Since it came after the Xbox 360 and Wii versions of the game and in the shadows of GTA IV, Mercenaries 2 or Saints Row 2, Bully: Scholarship Edition for PC was heavily ignored by the public. And it deserves at least a bit more – we’ll see why throughout this review.

The story is very simple: you are Jimmy Hopkins, a teen that arrives at Bullworth Academy after being kicked out of virtually every high school in the area. This new school, though, seems to be the perfect place for Jimmy as it has a bit of everything: nerds to beat, bullies to beat, cool kids to beat (you get the idea) and all sorts of girl which are present in an institute led by a tyrannical director and some rather strange teachers (for example, a questionable art teacher posing for her students). Oh, yes, and there’s violence. LOTS of it.
Following this intro, the story unfolds as you play it and I’m not going to spoil it here, but I do have one thing to note: it’s incredibly scripted, it allows for absolutely zero choices and, no matter if you’d like to follow one path instead of another, it’s not possible (except for, of course, the optional quests, but they are more of a dead weight for the story). However, this does not mean that we’re dealing with a bad or uninteresting story. On the contrary, it’s really complex and along the way you’ll do everything you can imagine a school boy bully doing: for bullying nerds to kissing girls, skipping class and many, many more.
Being mainly a bad guy, Jimmy Hopkins has an arsenal of weapons to aid his cause of provoking unprovoked (sic!) pain. The heavy weapons present in similar sandbox titles are replaced with slingshots, baseball bats, marbles and rotten eggs in Bully: Scholarship Edition, but they tend to be very destructive. Thankfully, there is no actual killing or blood splatter involved here: the most you can do to your opponent is let it crawl and whine on the ground after a few well placed hits.
Even though not at all one of the most complex combat system in video games, the one brought by Rockstar in Bully is pretty cool actually: there are lots of combos you can make using all sorts of combinations of just two buttons – combos that are quite pleasant to look at and very destructive. This, however, will only be done if you really care – if you don’t, you’ll simply stick to a chaotic button mashing that will prove to be as destructive as the most elaborate moves you learn. Because, yes, you have to learn all your moves from the gym teacher or from the hobo living nearby.
However, it’s not all about mindless kicking and fighting in Bully, but most of it is. I’m talking about picking locks, spying on girls, tagging bridges and doing all sorts of anti-social activities, including pinching girls’ asses when they’re not paying attention (unfortunately this has no effect whatsoever). Still, you’ll want to be careful because the “hand of the law” has a strong presence in the game (generally as prefects in the school, but you’ll see some police too) and as soon as you’re cornered, there’s not much you can do to escape. When you’re caught, though, you’ll only lose a few of your items and you’ll have no problem replacing them afterwards.
Although the story is linear (you can only choose the order you take on the quests) and scripted, it offers a lot of various challenges, from recovering lost goods to fighting against all sorts of people, doing stupid pranks and even winning bicycle races. You won’t get bored with the challenges and you’ll generally enjoy the course of the story, even though you will wonder how come Jimmy beats a “fatty” in one mission, just to help him recover his comic book in another…





The same can’t be said about the tons of mini games you simply have to complete. Being in a school, you must go to classes too (even though you could skip them, you should attend to them since passing them offer you all sorts of goodies) and they all involve mini-games. They do vary from class to class (a simple rhythm game here, a puzzle there) but generally offer no real challenge and, due to their repetitive nature, they become quite annoying. I know it drove me mad to keep breaking into lockers, but I kept doing it. Don’t ask me why.
Throughout the game, controlling Jimmy will not prove to be a challenge, but since the mouse is only used to move the camera (and for fighting), the movement arrows prove to be a bit too unresponsive every now and then, making Jimmy look like a robot that only knows to move left, right, back and forth and nowhere in between. And that’s not the only porting issue of Bully: Scholarship Edition.
I mean – come on! Two years after the original was released, I was expecting a flawless PC game, and not a rushed out port. Because that’s the feeling it offers, from interface problems to “hidden” triggers in missions and, generally, a poor use of the most responsive PC game controller: the mouse.
The visuals are pretty dated too: there are only a few individuals that look different from the rest. Generally, the looks of a character tell you exactly what his statute in the school is: from the scared nerds to the beautiful cheerleaders, you’ll get bored of seeing the same rugged faces. Probably I would’ve been impressed two years ago – the school and nearby town are created with special attention for detail, but the poor quality of the visuals tends to be more visible than Rockstar’s incredible work to offer, as always, a very solid game world.
The sound, on the other hand is OK and, even though it doesn’t flow very naturally during cutscenes and the Bullworth students say the same things over and over again, it will probably never bother you.
Conclusion
Bully: Scholarship Edition for PC is a solid quality game, but it was released a bit too late. It gets very repetitive, it’s very linear and scripted and the visuals are dated. However, the main story offers a huge amount of play time, challenging, quick and fun to play missions which make you forget (or at least forgive) most of the issues. It’s a title that allows you to be the bad boy in a bad boy’s school and do all sorts of crazy things I truly hope no sane person would do in real life: for that and not only, Bully is really worth a go. I doubt you’ll regret it.

Here are some more Bully: Scholarship Edition PC images:




Specifications:

MINIMUM SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS

Special Controllers : Xbox 360 controller compatible
Hard Drive Space : 4.7 GB of hard drive disc space
Operating System : Windows XP/Windows Vista
Processor : Intel Pentium 4 (3+ GHZ) AMD Athlon 3000
RAM : 1 GB RAM
Video Card : DirectX 9.0c Shader 3.0 supported Nvidia 6800 or 7300 or better ATI Radeon X1 300 or better




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INFORMASI PEMESANAN


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