Lost Planet 3 Review | Arcade Sushi
Added: 10.09.2013 0:19 | 5 views | 0 comments
Once considered an important new franchise for next gen hardware, Lost Planet has struggled to keep itself in the public eye through recent years. Since it launched as one of the prettiest early Xbox 360 games, Lost Planet has tumbled from AAA international hit to a forgotten franchise. In fact, Lost Planet had such cache that it was one of a very few titles that was on its way to the silver screen.
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| Lost Planet 3 Review | VGReloaded
Added: 10.09.2013 0:19 | 5 views | 0 comments
VGR - "I must admit I was a little amazed that Lost Planet got a third game after the mixed response of Lost Planet 2 which I found to be a fun, but frustrating experience. But to be honest, its best if youve never played a game in the series before as it takes away some of the frustration and is actually a prequel to the original game so E.D.N III hasnt been terraformed and is an icy wasteland in which you play as Jim Peyton, an engineer who is working with the evil corporation NEVEC to get pay checks to send to his wife and unborn child."
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| Lost Planet 3 Thermal Posts (T-Posts) Locations Guide
Added: 09.09.2013 23:19 | 6 views | 0 comments
GameDynamo - "Lost Planet 3 features Thermal Posts, also known as T-Posts, all around the world. Players can use these posts to boost their in-game money. There are six of these energy syphoning sites total. Finding all of them earns you the Master Planter trophy or achievement."
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| Lost Planet 3 Review | CSM
Added: 09.09.2013 20:19 | 7 views | 0 comments
The last in Capcom's Lost Planet series, LOST PLANET 3 is an action-heavy adventure that once again drops you onto the icy planet of E.D.N. III, where Jim Peyton, a Utility Rig pilot for Neo-Venus Construction (NEVEC), is looking to tap into the planets "thermal" energy source.
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| Destructoid- Review: Lost Planet 3
Added: 09.09.2013 17:23 | 6 views | 0 comments
DT:Lost Planet 3 starts on an almost immediate high note, and kind of just tumbles from there. Jim Peyton, the humble engineer and family man is the star of the show, telling the game's story while trapped under some rubble. But while the intro attempts to tell this grand tale of intrigue on the deathbed of a sympathetic old man, the story distills down to shooting some bugs, and then shooting some giant enemy crabs for massive damage. Oh, and it's a prequel to the first few games -- but you wouldn't really notice that (or care) for the vast majority of the campaign.
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| Lost Planet 3 Review (PopBucket)
Added: 09.09.2013 0:18 | 9 views | 0 comments
PopBucket says: Lost Planet 3 has its share of shortcomings but does a lot of things extremely well, creating an experience which is enjoyably diverse. Like E.D.N III, what appears to be bleak on the surface is in fact filled with a central core of passion and ambitious ideas. Its also refreshing to see an entry in the series which is fuelled almost entirely by narrative and great characterisation.
The franchise has come a long way since the rst game at the beginning of this generation. It feels like everything is moving in the right direction and when the next generation comes, were condent that Lost Planet wont be left out in the cold.
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| Lost Planet 3 review | Cheatmasters
Added: 08.09.2013 11:18 | 8 views | 0 comments
By: avoiderdragon
Lost Planet: Extreme Condition was one of the first games released by a Japanese company in the late 2000s that seemed to attempt solely at connect with western audiences. That could be wrong, but there have been plenty of titles later on released by Japanese companies since then, many of which are well-received games in their own right. The Lost Planet franchise is now on its third installment, and its no longer made internally by Capcom. The result of that collaboration is rather underwhelming, to say the least.
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n4g.com
| Lost Planet 3 review | Cheatmasters
Added: 08.09.2013 10:18 | 8 views | 0 comments
By: avoiderdragon
Lost Planet: Extreme Condition was one of the first games released by a Japanese company in the late 2000s that seemed to attempt solely at connect with western audiences. That could be wrong, but there have been plenty of titles later on released by Japanese companies since then, many of which are well-received games in their own right. The Lost Planet franchise is now on its third installment, and its no longer made internally by Capcom. The result of that collaboration is rather underwhelming, to say the least.
From:
n4g.com
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