Rainbow Six Vegas 2- Sam Fisher / Splinter Cell Operative
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is there any cheat to rank you up. cause im tired of trying to rank up 2 more spots
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@JSaint707 Why is Conviction so bad though. I mean sure it doesnt have the classic Splinter Cell feel, but if you just judge it as its own game its pretty amazing.
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Can you put on green googles
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@RyleyAshford Yes, it's a fun badass simulator to burn a few hours on. By now you know that's not what I expect in an SC game. DA is a rare two headed beast in that the last-gen XBOX version, the one developed as a side project by the CT team, is almost on par with CT. The 360 game is bad. The gameplay is choppy and the story is almost non-existent, but I quite enjoy last gen's DA. The decision to take on the Double Agent plotline was the beginning of the end for SC as we knew it.
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@RyleyAshford The direct quote is "provide a body." I stand by my point that it's a horribly constructed plot twist. When I said Sam "was demoted to a lawless killer seeking revenge in a very crowded sea of lawless killers seeking revenge," I didn't mean the Black Arrow PMC, I meant the countless generic action anti-heroes in games and movies with the same motivations as Sam. Where Sam was once a unique and likable person, he is now nothing more than a forgettable and flat character.
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@JSaint707 Yes, I will admit, you've pointed out enough valid points that it's not up-to-par with the rest as a chapter in the Splinter Cell series, but it's still a good game on its own. Yes, the Mark-&-Execute makes it a little too easy. Yes, interrogations can become a little too streamlined. Yes, the plot does have a lot of holes in it; specifically why Lambert staged her death and DIDN'T tell Sam as opposed to letting him suffer, but look at it like this: It's not Double Agent bad.
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@JSaint707 If I'm correct, Andrei Kobin's involvement was to "create a body" for the staging of Sarah's death; either by finding a near-identical look-alike of Sarah (unlikely) or using a woman who's had plastic surgery to imitate Sarah being the unwitting victim (also unlikely), but it all seems up to the player's imagination which is admittedly pretty lazy.
As for "they," "they" are the thugs hired by Kobin under orders of Third Echelon's new director, Tom Reed.
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@RyleyAshford Instead, they throw in whatever story elements they can to add fuel to Sam's fire, plausibility be damned. The reasoning behind Lambert's betrayal features more holes than the corrupted Third Echelon. It's horrible. At the most basic level, Sam would confirm that the body was indeed his daughters. A wake? Funeral? A father would recognize his own daughter.
Who are "they" that you referred to? I just don't know who you're talking about.
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@RyleyAshford Oh I am aware that Conviction can be played stealthily. Believe me, I tried. The fact is there is one crouch speed with zero noise detection and a designated "win" button makes Conviction the shallowest, easiest, and most uninteresting stealth game out there. The entire plot of Conviction is a half-assed attempt by Ubisoft to correct the story mistakes they think they made in DA, such as the death of Sarah. They would have been better off leaving her dead
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@JSaint707 Now, to be fair! Just because the movements and combat are opted for a more action-oriented feel, that doesn't mean you HAVE to do it that way. I played through the game in a more passive, stealthy manner; I minimalized my kills while progressing through the level trying out new routes with each failure. Remember that it's revealed in the novels that Sam DOES kill and have a dark sense of humor, but he doesn't like it and only does so out of necessity. Do what must be done.
@pyroBl0od68 Play a real Splinter Cell game. Conviction doesn't count. Do me a favor and google Chaos Theory.
JSaint707 11 months ago 6
@dyn0f9g77 There's a reason for that...
JSaint707 9 months ago 2