Monday 12 June 2017

Prince Of Persia The Two Thrones PC


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Prince of Persia The Two Thrones Overview
Prince Of Persia The Two Thrones is publish by Ubisoft. This game starts with the story of the prince who comes back from the island of time to Babylon along with his love Kaileena. He expects peace in his homeland which he has always thought of. But soon it is revealed that the entire kingdom is in war and chaos.
Prince also finds that the whole kingdom rebels against him. They imprison the prince as he comes out. In this situation Kaileena gives sacrifice by setting free the sands of time to save his life and eventually save the whole kingdom.
At the present the prince is just like hunted everywhere in the streets of Babylon as a escapee. As the time passes the prince also finds out that what went before has given life to a darker and deadlier prince which is trying to take over the real prince’s soul.
Swords and shadows! Dirt and "bitches!" Warrior was to be Ubi's sinister, consumer friendly modification of the fundamental Sands mechanics that were ever so thrilling and critically acclaimed. But despite best efforts and a healthy dose of hard rocking, Warrior Within cheesily fell short of the amazingly high bar its predecessor set. In trying to appeal to more folks by lining the game with more stuff, much of the original magic was lost. Indeed, an excess of scantily clad women, shadowy beasts and heavy riffs made Warrior Within ordinary, for when all is dark and grimy, even the dark and grimy become bright. A good rule of thumb is to understand when one more stroke is too many and when an excess of magic is drab.
Sadly, it seemed back then that a title of Sands of Time's caliber would just not come, given the new path laid down by Warrior Within for the Prince series. Boy does it ever feel good to be wrong! I'm dazzled. Prince of Persia: The Two Thrones is Sands of Time reborn.

Ubisoft also expertly balances Yuri's third Prince between two lines of starkly contrasting motivation, or the two thrones. Throughout the course of this adventure, the Prince must decide what's truly important. He must confront his Dark self as it struggles to gain a foothold on his conscious and he must also fess up to past crimes and move past them regardless of hardship (while listening to awesome music).
Reforming the Prince into his original shape was a bloody good idea! Genteel as he is, Yuri Lowenthal's Prince of Persia in The Sands of Time is far preferable to Warrior Within's Wolverine Clone #818. The gruff, self-serving madman who sought to stop the Empress's Sands at any cost was not the young royal plagued by distrust and delusions of glory we all loved. #818 was simply out of place in such a fairytale. So being back in Yuri's shoes just feels right.
Now come to the graphical point of view, this game is exceptionally well in this category. 3D All round viewing is pretty good. we also have those well built puzzling scenes in the game. The sword fighting is beautiful with awesome graphics. In this game you have two different characters which have different combat styles so you can enjoy two game plays.
The Prince of Persia: Sands of Time trilogy has always been known for its tight controls and satisfying environmental puzzles set in beautiful levels. The series' control scheme has served as a model for countless other games that also feature an acrobatic protagonist like the prince. The same great interface remains in the third game of the series, The Two Thrones. Like the other two games, you'll find yourself wall running, jumping, flipping, and vaulting your way up fiendishly designed environmental puzzles, as well as fighting vicious enemies with the improved combat system introduced in the last game, Warrior Within. The prince has a few new tricks up his sleeve as well, but longtime fans of the series should still feel right at home.

The story of the Sands of Time trilogy began with the prince's army attacking and conquering the capital of the Indian empire. In the midst of the battle, however, an evil vizier caused the release of the sands of time, wreaking havoc over the city and the surrounding countryside. The prince and an Indian princess named Farah battled together to defeat the vizier, bottled up the sands, and restored the world to a normal state. The story continued in Warrior Within, where an embittered prince set sail for the Island of Time, seeking sanctuary from an unstoppable time creature called the Dahaka, who pursued him endlessly because of his part in unleashing the sands of time. There, the prince battled not only the Dahaka, but also Kaileena, the Empress of Time. Fans of the first game felt the series lost a lot of its soul in Warrior Within, as the suddenly cynical prince was much more arrogant and less likable.

The Two Thrones begins with the prince returning to Babylon from the Island of Time with the mortal Kaileena as his new lover (this part of the plot may be confusing to those who didn't see the alternate ending of Warrior Within). As they pull in to the harbor at Babylon, the duo finds the city under siege. Their ship is wrecked by the invaders, and Kaileena is captured by the enemies. You quickly find that the vizier is back and responsible for the uprising. He murders Kaileena and unleashes the sands of time upon Babylon, and the prince must battle to regain his kingdom and avenge Kaileena's death.

But it's not just sand creatures and other bad guys from the vizier's army that the prince must fight. With the sands of time infecting his soul, the prince must also battle the whims of his darker, more arrogant side. Throughout the game's long, 12- to 15-hour campaign, the prince will morph back and forth between his normal self and the dark prince. He'll also have internal dialogues between his split personalities, with the original actor from Sands of Time voicing the normal prince, and a new voice actor representing the sneering, more sarcastic dark prince. Here, the game almost becomes self-referential in addressing the popular criticism levied against the arrogant prince from Warrior Within. The internal strife in the schizophrenic prince's mind forms a compelling part of the storyline in The Two Thrones, especially because both the writing and voice acting are pretty good.

The Two Thrones still uses what appears to be a very similar engine as was used in the previous games in the series. While it has aged, the game still looks fantastic, especially the large and wondrous-looking levels you explore. Whether you're jumping across rooftops in the city of Babylon, plying its underground caves, or exploring the palace grounds, there's always something pretty to look at. In the PC version, you'll probably notice that textures used for skin and certain parts of the environment aren't as sharp, making it obvious that this version of the game is a console port. However, the deficiencies in the graphics engine are largely masked by lots of light bloom, which creates a soft-focus visual effect that contributes to the fairy tale atmosphere. The game still looks great overall, though, especially because of the prince's great-looking animations while jumping, climbing, or doing speed kills. The game also runs very smoothly, even at high resolution with antialiasing turned on. The music is a marked improvement from the last game, eschewing the annoying hard rock for more traditional Middle Eastern themes and instruments that you'd expect in a game called Prince of Persia. The voice acting is also very good, although the actress voicing Kaileena (who also narrates the game) might be a little too soft-spoken to hear clearly at times.

You should try out this exciting Game from Ubisoft Franchise. When you will complete this game. Other parts of this game like Prince Of Persia Warrior Within very easy for you.


Features Of Prince Of Persia The Two Thrones
Following are the main features of Prince Of Persia The two Thrones.
  1. Action game.
  2. Sword fighting with mind blowing Combos.
  3. Thrilling outlook and Scenery .
  4. Amazing graphics with detail.
  5. Many puzzle solving missions .
  6. Attractive and tense story.
  7. Two different deadly warriors in one game.

System Requirements of Prince of Persia The Two Thrones
Below are the minimum system requirements of Prince Of Persia The two Thrones.

CPU:Intel Pentium III or AMD Athlon
CPU Speed:1 GHz
RAM:256 MB
OS:Windows 2000/XP (only)
Video Card:32 MB DirectX 9.0c compliant video card (NVIDIA GeForce3+ / ATI Radeon 7500+)

DirectX version:DirectX 9.0c (included on disk)
Sound Card:Yes
Free Disk Space:1.5 GB
CD-ROM:16x or faster or 4x DVD-ROM

Prince Of Persia The Two Thrones Free Download

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2 comments:

  1. In this game password option is shaw on display before extrect the file

    ReplyDelete