6
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Recent reviews by Guy

Showing 1-6 of 6 entries
1 person found this review helpful
0.7 hrs on record
Awful
Posted 22 February.
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No one has rated this review as helpful yet
4.1 hrs on record (3.5 hrs at review time)
Most potential of all the drug simulators out there. Hyped!
Posted 16 February.
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No one has rated this review as helpful yet
1.0 hrs on record
Early Access Review
Bad game. Servers are all full. Gameplay is a very small and boring loop. There's like 3 buildings you can actually enter in the "open world"
Posted 7 December, 2023.
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No one has rated this review as helpful yet
32.0 hrs on record (23.3 hrs at review time)
Good game but needs polish
Posted 26 November, 2023.
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2 people found this review helpful
44.6 hrs on record (44.1 hrs at review time)
The whole idea of "Call of Duty HQ" is just confusing, and the implementation is even worse. I feel like I'm on a bad version of Hulu and need minutes to find the game mode I wanna play.

Whatever happened to the simple menus of COD4 and Black Ops 1/2? Those worked perfectly.

MWII and MWIII are also considerably worse than the first part in the rebooted series. Do not recommend buying.
Posted 2 September, 2023. Last edited 25 December, 2023.
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No one has rated this review as helpful yet
1,763.3 hrs on record (1,115.0 hrs at review time)
This game runs flawlessly on my 2008 Toyota Prius XW20 Hybrid due to the 2008 Toyota Priuses outstanding features and an options list that can take it from a base sedan all the way up to a luxury car.

The 2008 Toyota Prius should be considered more than just a rolling personal statement declaring, "Ahoy there you scummy SUV driver! I'm part of the solution, not the problem." Of course, people buy cars to make statements all the time. A stately luxury car can say, "Look world, I'm successful." Buying a Hummer can say, "This enormous 6,000-pound truck is synonymous with my (delusional) sense of personal machismo." Yet despite being the poster child for environmental awareness, the Prius should be closely considered for all the real, tangible ways it provides daily transportation. You don't have to bleed green to appreciate its virtues.

Even without its innovative and revolutionary hybrid power plant, the Prius would be a sensible, functional-first midsize sedan. It may look small, but the well-packaged and airy interior is spacious for passengers and cargo alike. Plus, a long list of standard and optional features allows the Prius to serve both customers in search of a low-priced conveyance and those in need of more luxurious trappings.

Of course, the Prius is first and foremost a hybrid -- and the benchmark upon which all others are based. Capable of running on electricity alone or in concert with the small gasoline four-cylinder engine, the Prius is capable of fuel economy that no current mainstream car can match -- even with the lower, revised 2008 EPA estimates. Like most hybrids, the 2008 Toyota Prius is best suited to drivers whose travels rarely take them farther than the city limits. Around town and in stop-and-go traffic, the Prius' electric motors and regenerative braking are optimized to provide superior fuel economy and optimal power delivery. It's OK on the freeway, but without consistent braking or coasting, the battery runs down, forcing the anemic four-cylinder engine to carry most of the load.

In a few short years, the Toyota Prius has gone from low-volume oddity to being one of the 10 best-selling cars in America. With that popularity have come a slew of new hybrid models that generally trade a few miles per gallon for a more traditional body style.

Despite this competition, though, nobody comes close to beating the Prius' mix of fuel economy, interior versatility and for 2008, a base price under $21,000. Plus, for better or worse, nothing else can make a better environmental statement.

Every 2008 Toyota Prius comes standard with antilock brakes with brake assist, traction control, front-seat side airbags and full-length side curtain airbags. Stability control is a package option. In government crash tests, Toyota's hybrid car earned four stars out of five for driver and front-passenger protection in frontal impacts. In side-impact testing, it earned five stars for front-occupant protection and four stars for the rear. In Insurance Institute for Highway Safety testing, the Prius earned the top rating of "Good" for its protection in frontal-offset and side-impact crashes.

All in all, I hate this game.
Posted 17 March, 2020. Last edited 29 December, 2023.
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Showing 1-6 of 6 entries