Wednesday, 24 September 2014

QUAKE 4



Release date:


Oct 18 2005 - PC
Nov 18 2005 - Xbox 360 
Available Platforms:PC, Xbox 360
Genre:Shooter
Published by:Activision
ESRB Rating:
Mature




Quake 4 System Requirements

>Windows 2000/XP
>Pentium 4 2.0 GHz or Athlon XP 2000+ Processor
>512MB RAM
>8x speed CD-ROM drive and latest drivers
>2.8GB uncompressed hard-drive space, plus 400MB for Windows swap file
>100% DirectX 9.0c compatible 16-bit sound card and latest drivers
>100% Windows 2000/XP compatible mouse, keyboard and latest drivers
>DirectX 9.0c included
>3D Hardware Accelerator Card required
>100% DirectX 9.0c compatible 64MB
>Hardware Accelerated video card and the latest drivers

ATI Radeon 9700
ATI Radeon X300 Series
ATI Radeon X550 Series
ATI Radeon X600 Series
ATI Radeon X700 Series
ATI Radeon X800 Series
ATI Radeon X850 Series
NVIDIA GeForce 3/Ti Series
NVIDIA GeForce 4/Ti Series
NVIDIA GeForce FX Series
NVIDIA GeForce 6 Series
NVIDIA GeForce 7 Series


INSTRUCTIONS:

>MOUNT THE IMAGE USING ALCOHOL 120% OR DAEMON TOOLS. 
>INSTALL USING THE KEYGEN LOCATED INTHE "DEVIANCE" FOLDER
>COPY THE CRACK TO THE INSTALLATION DIRECTORY
>FULL GAME, NO RIP, FULLY TESTED BY OUR TEAM
>PLAY AND ENJOY!!!! 

DOWNLOAD

>>>First Download utorrent>>>   To Download utorrent. Click On utorrent Button(below).


For QUAKE 4 FREE Download  torrent(verified) file. Click Download Button.

                                         


After File gets Download. Click OK.
.DOWNLOAD STARTS.

ENJOY.

QUAKE 4 OFFICIAL TRAILER



QUAKE 4 REVIEW


Early on in the sci-fi shooter Quake 4, one of your fellow space marines barks, "I do my job and shut the hell up, just like you should." This might have been the mantra of the designers, too - Quake 4 is here to kick some ass, not question the nature of its existence. That's a shame, because there's a twist to this first-person shooter that could have led to greater things; instead, the game feels uninspired and uninspiring.

The big surprise in Quake 4 isn't really a surprise - halfway through the game, your hero, bad-ass grunt MatthewKane, gets captured and "Stroggified," which involves being tortured and upgraded into a cyborg.

 The silicon mind control chip inside your head hasn't been activated, so you still fight for the humans in the war to protect Earth. You'll dispatch baddies with the usual complement of Quakeweaponry, including the railgun and the hyperblaster, as your missions of "go there and get this thing" unfold. Occasionally you’ll jump into a vehicle like a tank or an armored walker, but no matter how you attack enemies, you'll grow tired of seeing their AI do little more than jump out of the way of your shots.

The Strogg homeworld, land of unholy unions of flesh and technology, looks gorgeously creepy. But after you're Stroggified, the gameplay doesn't fundamentally change - you'll get small health and armor bonuses, but no ethical dilemmas. How cool would it have been to be forced, against your will, to fight for the Strogg? There's no point to the plot twist; so much for man vs. machine vs. self.
But is that expecting too much? Quake 4 was designed to make things go boom and look pretty doing it. On that level, it succeeds, but no better or worse than any other first-person shooter. The robust multiplayer still lives up to the Quake legacy, but as a single-player experience, Quake 4 could have been a lot more ambitious and, in turn, a lot more satisfying.

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