Download Game Kknd Krossfire Portable Pc Stand Average ratng: 8,0/10 4875 votes

Game Box for Krush Kill 'N Destroy 2: Krossfire (PC). Lpc2129 lcd interfacing program code pdf. After the first 'Survivors' left their underground bunkers to stand face to face with the race of 'Mutants'. Download Game KKND Krossfire Portable PC KKnD2: Krossfire adalah lanjutan dari KKnD1 yang diluncurkan pada tanggal 31 Oktober 1998 untuk Microsoft Windows. Game ini diluncurkan di PlayStation tahun 1999 sebagai KKnD: Krossfire.game ini di set tahun 2179, 100 tahun setelah World Nuclear War.

The sequel to Beam Software's KKND this is a 2D real-time strategy game that features 51 single player missions and 20 multiplayer maps. Players have three sides to choose from, the Survivors, the Evolved, and the Series 9 Robots. The standard real-time strategy game units are included -- ground-based, aerial, and naval.

Players build their combat units and then slug it out with the enemy. The units are pre-rendered and 2D but the game has 3D terrain with line of sight and attacking units get an advantage by attacking from higher terrain. A mission editor and unit editor are included. Krush, Kill, 'n' Destroy: Krossfire (a.k.a. KKnD2 is a fun post-apocalyptic real-time strategy game from Australian developer Beam International.

Similar to its 'prequels' KKnD and KKnD: Extreme, KKnD2 is a marginal contribution to the crowded RTS genre, although it has some innovative features to go with pleasant graphics and a decent plot. One of the most ironic things about the game is that it boasts of 'the best AI in the genre,' when in fact the AI is not even intelligent enough to do pathfinding properly. Strategy Plus' short but concise review says it all about this ambitious RTS that doesn't quite merit our top game tag, although not for the lack of trying: 'Krossfire, set on post-apocalyptic Earth, starts its story forty years after its predecessor. In addition to the Survivors and Evolved in the original, a new side has been added: Series 9 agricultural robots.

Nothing ticks off a farming robot more than the destruction of crops, and it's pay back time. Unfortunately, the addition of a new side has very little effect on the gameplay-there are no significant differences between it and the others. The game uses two dimensional maps and sprites for units.

While this lacks the flair of a 3D game, it's well-executed, with terrain graphics and explosions that are on a par with other games in the genre. A fair amount of variation exists in the terrain; city, jungle, and desert maps are all well done. Also, the terrain is actually effective; for example, infantry units can move through trees, but vehicles get stuck. Controlling high ground is a huge advantage: units can shoot down over a cliff, but the poor saps below cannot return fire. The units graphics are excellent, with lots of variations between the sides. Unfortunately, the differences end there.

All three armies are effectively identical, functionally speaking-there is an exact counterpart for every unit. This severely limits the replay value; once you know one side, you know them all. Another problem is the lack of creativity. All sides have the equivalent of the big tank, the bigger tank and the truly devastating really really big tank. Bombers and transports are also included, but the strategy of the game boils down to whoever has the most powerful guns. This makes the strategy rather flat; everyone loves teleporting an army into the enemy base, but here it cannot be done.

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The equivalent sides and lack of creative units does have one advantage: play balancing is not a problem, with one exception. The defensive structures are incredibly powerful. Most maps have choke points and players can set up a few towers capable of repelling huge armies until really powerful units become available. This makes designing an attack very challenging, but discourages attacks, slowing the place of the game. The enemy artificial intelligence is decent; units play as a team rather than a bunch of NBA stars. The computer usually has a huge numerical superiority, but who wants even odds, anyway? The end result is a pretty hard game.