Testseek.at haben 23 Experten-Bewertungen der Destroy All Humans: Path of the Furon und die durchschnittliche Bewertung beträgt 47% erhoben. Blättern Sie nach unten und sehen Sie alle Beiträge zu Destroy All Humans: Path of the Furon.
(47%)
23 Tests
Durchschnittliche Punktzahl von Experten, die dieses Produkt bewertet haben.
Zusammenfassung: Drift City, from Ijji, in my opinion, is the only, true, racing MMO. You actually drive around a very large city, made up of 4 smaller cities. The city feels alive for lack of another word; NPC cars drive around the city, stop at red lights, and even h...
Zusammenfassung: Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furon for the Xbox 360 lacks the amusing destructive and fun missions of the first few games in the series. In fact, the game feels like it exhausted all its ideas and is recycling the weakest missions from past games. I...
Zusammenfassung: Developer Sandbox Games was shut down by THQ nearly a full month before Destroy All Humans: Path of the Furon hit retail shelves, and the PlayStation 3 version of the game was canceled shortly thereafter. After a short time with the Xbox 360 version of...
Zusammenfassung: Open-world action titles have come a long way since the last console generation, with many offering massive "living" settings and sharp online integration. But you wouldn't know it from Destroy All Humans!: Path of the Furon, a game that feels both woe...
Zusammenfassung: The craze of open-world gaming is hitting yet again. It seems that now that developers have had enough time to get their bearings on the current generation of hardware its time to bring out the big guns with huge open worlds populated with loads of in...
For those who can look past the game’s flaws there are a few hours of mindless destruction and anal-probing to be had here, but only if you’ve exhausted every other game out there. 3.1/10Print this pageUser reviews (1)Share this pageNoticed so...
Say what you will about Destroy All Humans! Path of the Furons shoddy graphics, lame script and bad physics - when you throw it away, it at least lands inside of the bin instead of embedding itself in the wall. McKinley Noble ...