Thursday, January 12, 2012

Portal

Portal Review



Portal Feature

  • Award-winning, innovative gameplay
  • The first first-person puzzle action adventure game
  • Two bonus games introduce new play challenges
  • Support for level editing and mod creation - build your own Portal puzzles
  • Hours of single player gaming
Portal is an action/puzzle video game from Valve, creators of Half-Life 2 and Counter-Strike. The winner of over 40 awards, including 15 Game of the Year honors, it is one of the most original games on any platform in years and offers gamers hours of unique gameplay. Set in the mysterious Aperture Science Laboratories, Portal is designed to change the way players approach, manipulate and surmise the possibilities in a given environment; similar to how Half-Life 2’s Gravity Gun innovated new ways to leverage an object in any given situation. Players must solve physical puzzles and challenges by opening portals to maneuver objects, and themselves, through space.

'Portal' game logo
The new physics of fun
Use the portal gun to create your path
Use the portal gun to create your path.
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Every portal has two ends
Every portal has two ends.
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Toss companion cubes through portals for use on the other side
Toss companion cubes through portals.
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The Story
Portal contains only two characters, the player-controlled Chell and GLaDOS (Genetic Lifeform and Disk Operating System), a computer AI that monitors, directs and misleads Chell in a kind of twisted experiment. It's not exactly a match made in heaven

Regardless, Chell must rely on information provided by GLaDOS to survive as she navigates through a series of mostly doorless rooms using the Aperture Science Handheld Portal Device ("portal gun"). The portal gun creates two portal ends, one orange and the other blue. Both are simultaneously a potential entrance and exit and objects, alive or otherwise, that travel through one end will exit the other at the same speed. In addition, portals create a visual and physical connection between two different locations in 3D space. Their ends are restricted to planar surfaces, but if the portal ends are on nonparallel planes, bizarre twists in geometry and gravity can occur as the player character is immediately reoriented to be upright with respect to gravity after leaving a portal. Chell can pass through open portals at will, but barriers, known as "Material Emancipation Grids" or 'fizzlers' prevent players from carrying objects beyond them. Luckily certain objects, known as 'companion cubes' can be tossed through. Once through these can then be used as the player wishes. Passage through these fields also closes any open portals, so it's important to look before you leap. It's Chell's challenge and yours to survive the hazards of the portals, including bobby traps, hidden gun turrets and the treachery of GLaDOS in the search for eventual freedom.

Features

  • Award-winning, innovative gameplay.
  • The first first-person puzzle action adventure game.
  • Two bonus games introduce new play challenges.
  • Support for level editing and mod creation – build your own Portal puzzles.
  • Hours of single player gaming.
  • Makes you feel smart!

System Requirements:

Minimum Specifications:Recommended Specifications:
OS:Windows Vista/XP/2000
Processor:1.7 Ghz ProcessorPentium 4 Processor (3.0 Ghz or better)
RAM:512 MB RAM1 GB RAM
Video Card:DirectX 8 level Graphics cardDirectX 9 level Graphics card
Other:DVD-ROM Drive/Mouse/Keyboard/Internet Connection
 

Portal is a new single player game from Valve, creators of Half-Life 2 and Counter-Strike. Set in the mysterious Aperture Science Laboratories, Portal has earned over 15 Game of the Year Awards and offers gamers hours of unique gameplay.The game is designed to change the way players approach, manipulate and surmise the possibilities in a given environment; similar to how Half-Life 2's Gravity Gun innovated new ways to leverage an object in any given situation. Players must solve physical puzzles and challenges by opening portals to maneuvering objects, and themselves, through space.


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