Nainstalovat Steam
přihlásit se
|
jazyk
简体中文 (Zjednodušená čínština)
繁體中文 (Tradiční čínština)
日本語 (Japonština)
한국어 (Korejština)
ไทย (Thajština)
български (Bulharština)
Dansk (Dánština)
Deutsch (Němčina)
English (Angličtina)
Español-España (Evropská španělština)
Español-Latinoamérica (Latin. španělština)
Ελληνικά (Řečtina)
Français (Francouzština)
Italiano (Italština)
Bahasa Indonesia (Indonéština)
Magyar (Maďarština)
Nederlands (Nizozemština)
Norsk (Norština)
Polski (Polština)
Português (Evropská portugalština)
Português-Brasil (Brazilská portugalština)
Română (Rumunština)
Русский (Ruština)
Suomi (Finština)
Svenska (Švédština)
Türkçe (Turečtina)
Tiếng Việt (Vietnamština)
Українська (Ukrajinština)
Nahlásit problém s překladem
The only cons I can say is that the game needs good hardware, or you have to set the settings on very low. The loading times are really high, compare to other state of the art games.
Practice. Practice. Pratice.
Also, having higher frame rates is a huge boost.
Amazing mix of FPS and RTS, pulled off very very well
Strong emphasys on teamwork
Asymmetrical teams and combat
Rewarding to pull off team plans
Cons: Steep learning curve
At the price it is now (humble bundle) it's worth a shot...
Once you're getting the hang of things you should try to find a server that, while still open to rookies, also has some experienced people on both sides who are active and vocal. When you finally get into a match that has a balanced amount of rookies who can listen and helpful veterans on both sides, it's gonna be one of the best games you will ever play.
Not like EVE Online steep. Somewhere around Starcraft 2 steep?
Depends on how good you are at picking stuff up. It takes time to play every class and try every role. Also other players seem exceptionally good at ruining your learning process by killing you. You may save up for fade for 20 minutes just to lose it in 10 seconds - whoops! But then you just learned one stupid thing to not do (lesson 1 - dont evolve to expensive life form out of base, seriously, dont). Ask people how to use lifeforms or weapons/jetpacks/exos before jumping in one. Or watch other people. Or look up tutorials online. Plenty of help around.
I would say 5-10 hours to be reasonably helpful as marine/skulk and much more to have well rounded grasp of everything else.
NS2 is hard and it does have a steep learning curve due to many factors but if you have FPS experience, especially Quake or more old school shooters and are willing to invest a bit of time into learning then you will be fine. Just know which servers to join because some aren't rookie friendly and people will get annoyed with you.
Fact is, the meta and gameplay changes dramatically during steam sales/humble bundle because rookies don't know how the game flows and a lot of vets want to keep that experience intact. I'm one of those guys, sometimes I just want a good game of competitive NS2 going but sometimes I'll be ok with commanding a team of rookies and helping them out.
Also no matter how bad the outlook of the game looks it can always be turned around ( that is the best part of the game imo) :)