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SuperPower 2 | List Price: $29.99 Discount Price: $9.91

| Platform: Windows 98, Windows 2000, Windows Me, Windows XP Brand: Dreamcatcher Binding: CD-ROM Release Date: 2004-10-08 ESRB Age Rating: Teen
Features: - Real-World Data: largest database ever assembled for a computer game, using real-world CIA and US Naval Intelligence data.
- 32 Person Multiplayer: play as any one of 193 countries recognized by the United Nations.
- Political, Economic and Military Gameplay: The unique gameplay from the original SuperPower has been expanded and more fully realized.
- Create Your Own Mods: using the in-box toolkit, easily create scenarios and trade them over the internet.
The Good, The Bad and The Bugs [Posted on 2006-02-19] The concept behind Super Power 2 is great. You can basically take any country on earth and run it any way you see fit. If you want to try to run America as a military dictatorship or if you want to run Saudia Arabia as a multi-party, you can. The options are virtually limitless
You can produce commodities such as grain, meat, energy, ect. You can also build military units and even research new units
You can wage war on your neighbors, and while the battle graphics are a little cheesy, it gets the job done
This is not a game for the casual gamer who is looking for a quick game before dinner. This game is very in depth and demanding and some of the micro-management can become tedious.
Now for the bugs and let me tell you, there are bugs galore. The game is notorious for crashing to the desktop as well as saved games not loading. Even with the patches and tweaks, game stability leaves a lot to be desired. While Super Power 2 is a vast improvement over its predesecor (it does feature online play), with all of the bugs and technical issues, you may wind up wanting to nuke the game, instead of your neighbors
So is it worth $29.95? If it was not for all the glitches, crashes and bugs I would say yes. Until Golem Labs comes up with a solution, I would say to look for it in the bargin bin or 2cd hand
Frustrating [Posted on 2006-03-11] Excellent premise but this game is extremely fragile -- the least memory distraction makes the whole game lock up or shut down, and if you're playing in a LAN, it'll lock up all the computers linked into the game. Too much emphasis on military silliness to sell it to warmongering nerds. The designers would have been better advised to counterbalance the economic and political power and actions in the game, which would be a more realistic real-world scenario than the childish overtemptation for invasion and war found in this game.
I've seen a lot better [Posted on 2006-08-16] Buggy. This game crashed on me every twenty minutes until I got the patch. After the patch it was nearly impossible to play. Nations would just go rogue and start attacking far away countries. What is the most absurd to me is this game just doesn't take into account the U.S. Navy's sole ability to project war onto other continents. All the Navies in the game are capable of sending their warships all around the world and with enough gun ships, they can sink a U.S. carrier. I've also tried playing as many African nations, and it's nearly impossible, their economies are too small and they have huge militaries they can't possibly sustain. They go bankrupt in a few years. Also, the oddest thing that happened after the patch was the elections. The Republican party started winning. And I don't just mean in the U.S.! Soon the entire world was controlled by the Republican Party. While the idea is kinda funny to me, it's completely unrealistic and a huge bug.
The only fun part is playing as the US and attacking small countries. You overwhelm them so much it's kinda fun. You can take Cuba in a week. But once you get bored having the biggest military, the game's flaws become much harder to ignore.
Average game, terrible stability [Posted on 2007-01-29] I really wanted to like this game. I think that its basic premise is very innovative, and I looked forward to a combo of military strategy and economic managment.
However, this game just doesn't deliver. Bugs ranging from graphical glitches to horribly obvious exploits can be found everywhere. The AI is incredibly stupid. You can get the US to buy 1 piece of your land for trillions of dollars, get people to declare war on Iraq or North Korea just by asking them, and manipulate common markets to make triliions. The only redeming feature is the few diehard fans who are still trying to mod this game into what it should have been in the first place. Unless you are absoltuley desparate for this type of game, you shouldn't buy it.
Good Sim [Posted on 2007-12-31] This a very interactive sim with a steep learning curve. Has bugs, have to download a patch to get past the cd key. Will not appeal to everyone. If you like sims, and you like problem solving (a lot) this is the game for you.
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