Call of Duty 2 | 
| From: Aspyr Media
List Price: $49.99 Buy New: $36.98 You Save: $13.01 (26%)
New (4) Used (1) from $35.00
Rating: 26 reviews Sales Rank: 3222
Format: Cd Platform: Mac Os X Genre: Shooter Action Games ESRB: Teen Media: DVD-ROM Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Age: 12 - 20 years Shipping Weight (lbs): 1 Dimensions (in): 7.5 x 5.4 x 1.3 Legal Disclaimer: Warranty does not cover misuse of product.
MPN: 11240 UPC: 618870112404 EAN: 0618870112404 ASIN: B000ETJJAE
Release Date: May 22, 2006 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Condition: * * U.S.RETAIL MAC VIDEO GAMES * * NO BOOTLEGS, PROMOS, CLUBS, 2NDS OR COUNTERFEIT ASIAN IMPORTS * WANT TO KNOW WHO TO ORDER FROM?--READ THE FEEDBACK--BRAND NEW SEALED GAMES THAT ARE SHIPED 1ST CLASS WITHIN 24HRS BY A VETTED 5 STAR STAFF THAT E-MAILS YOU A TRACKING NUMBER SO THAT YOU CAN FOLLOW YOUR ORDER FROM OUR DOOR TO YOURS FOR WORRY FREE TRANSANCTIONS!
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| Features:
| • | Medium difficulty, WWII first-person shooter for Mac with well-designed scenarios and an intuitive feel | | • | Wily and aggressive AI creates both challenging enemies and well-balanced supporting soldiers | | • | Fight alongside the Russians, British, and Americans against the Germans in three interwoven campaigns | | • | Standard deathmatch, team deathmatch, capture-the-flag, and search-and-destroy, and new "headquarters" multiplayer modes | | • | Game auto-detects widescreen ratios and includes many performance-tweaking functions |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Product Description When the original Call of Duty was first released, the had a big impact on both consumers and critics alike, and it quickly rose to become one the top games in its class. Call of Duty did this by having well-designed campaigns and an intuitive feel, complemented by immersive sound effects and an enjoyable multiplayer option. Call of Duty 2 not only stays true to these strengths but has improved upon many other aspects of gameplay as well. If the original Call of Duty left you wanting more, this sequel will more than satisfy your hunger. 
Fight off waves of invading German troops and Panzer tanks in Moscow. View larger. | 
Race around in your own tank with others at your side in North Africa. View larger. | 
Scale the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc with the Army Rangers. View larger. | Just as in the original, Call of Duty 2 has you working your way through WWII across three interwoven campaigns. As a private in the Russian army, you will fight off waves of invading German troops and Panzer tanks in Moscow and Stalingrad. Once you finish the Russian campaign, you'll go up against Field Marshal Rommel's troops in the deserts of North Africa. As part of this campaign, you'll race around in your own tank with others at your side, and later you'll be tasked with calling in air strikes against enemy tanks. The final campaign has you in the role of an American corporal in Europe, but unlike most WWII games, you won't perform a D-Day landing on Omaha or Utah Beach. In Call of Duty 2, you have to scale the cliffs of Pointe du Hoc with the Army Rangers amidst a hail of artillery and machine gun fire, giving you a true appreciation of the time-honored saying, "War is Hell!" Call of Duty 2 is a thinking-gamer's first-person shooter of medium difficulty. While there are many reflexive elements, the game quite often requires you to consider the tactics of the situation in order to survive. While you can probably blow through the game in 10 hours on the regular setting, the more difficult settings require you to be much more thoughtful about your approach to the different scenarios. Your teammates in battle neither finish your fight, nor simply provide enemy fodder, while the enemy AI (artificial intelligence) is quite clever. If you are too meek, you will find yourself pinned down by aggressive fire while the enemy lobs grenades at you until you're decimated. Unlike the its predecessor, Call of Duty 2 doesn't give you a health bar. Instead, as you are hit by more and more fire, your screen grows increasingly red around the border, and your character begins to grunt and pant. This is your signal that it's time to find some cover in order to recuperate before you continue. Another major improvement is the enhanced smoke grenades, which not only look great but can be used effectively in battle to obscure your path from tanks or machine-gun nests as you make your way to an objective. While Call of Duty 2 has received an ESRB T (teen) rating -- meaning there are no gratuitous blood and guts splashing all over the screen -- this is still war, and there are enemies that will try to drag themselves to safety after being hit, only to be bludgeoned to a screaming death by your fellow men-at-arms. And like its older brother, Call of Duty 2 offers the standard deathmatch, team deathmatch, capture-the-flag, and search-and-destroy multiplayer modes. However, this version offers a new option called "headquarters," which most closely resembles the "crazy king" version of king-of-the-hill in Halo 2. Shifting headquarter points appear and must be captured in order to start building points, only to be overrun by the other side in order to halt that point gain. This version of the multiplayer mode is not only extremely fun, but it requires teams to adapt on the fly. Unlike the original, in this sequel you can skip forward from one mission to the next once you've cleared a campaign. The game also auto-detects 16:9 and 16:10 wide-screen ratios, as well as the sometimes tricky 5:4 ratio for LCD monitors. As the user, you can make use of a good set of performance tweaking functions, or you can allow the game to determine the optimal ratio, based on your system. With the addition of actual war footage as introductions to each campaign, and famous war quotes at the end of the scenes, Call of Duty 2 has everything you need to lose yourself in the middle of the biggest war in history of the world.
Product Description Call Of Duty 2 redefines the cinematic intensity and chaos of battle, as seen through the eyes of the ordinary soldiers who fought there together. The epic WWII conflict is a sequel to Call Of Duty and offers more immense, more intense and more realistic battles than ever before. All-new enhancements deliver stunning realism and gameplay, groundbreaking AI and choice-based gameplay innovations. Choice-based gameplay lets you play through missions your way - individualize your tactics and play missions in the order you see fit Multiplayer mayhem - Go online for intense Axis vs. Allies team-based multiplayer action
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| Customer Reviews: Read 21 more reviews...
Good game, but some implimentation problems September 6, 2006 Russell Dicker (Seattle, WA) 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
Call of Duty 2 was a lot of fun as a game, but there were a number of disapointing aspects to the implimentation that stopped it from being a 5 star experience. First the gameplay: I really enjoyed not needing to search for health packs all the time and the generous restart points. It made the gameplay much more fluid and helped to avoid getting frustrated. The missions were about the right level of difficulty and were very clear about the goals. There were rarely points where I was confused about where I needed to go or what I needed to do. My favorite levels were the tank missions in the desert and the assault on Hill 400. Sound was ok, but I didn't find it to be anything amazing. Graphics on the other hand were beautiful. I was able to play at 1050 x 1680 with anti-aliasing at 2x and only really experienced any slowdowns when I needed to run through smoke. Implimentation problems: The game trapped and ignored the Command-Tab keystroke so you couldn't pause the game, switch to a different application and come back. This became frustrating if I got an IM while playing and wanted to quickly see what it was. The only way to do this was to get to a known save point and quit. It also took control of the second monitor, but would only allow it to be blacked out. Once again the ability to context switch would have been nice. The game should have either used the second monitor (e.g. expand the person locator, show ammunition status, or mission status) or it should have left it for the OS and allowed context switching. Beyond that, I was quite satisified and am looking forward to CoD3! My system was MacPro 2.6 with 2G RAM and 2 x Nvidia GeForce 7300 GT
Call Of Duty 2 IS AWESOME!!! July 5, 2006 6 out of 6 found this review helpful
I love this game. I got it 2 days ago and I have already gotten up to Hill 400 in the American Campaign. So I just started and I am so addicted to it I almost finished it in Regular Difficulty. Its great fun and great squad-based action. Not to mention terrific graphics. Much better than the old COD. 100X better than Medal of Honor.
COD2 worth the cost! July 5, 2006 granmar (Moscow sometimes) 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
I had recently played COD and enjoyed the novice and veteran levels. COD2 has better graphics and a much more complex series of missions. I still feel that the game deliberately forces you to die, before "allowing" you to suddenly succeed in any particular situation. Overall - very much worth it G4 17" 1.67GHz is NOT really fast enough for super control!!! Get a faster Mac!!
Even Better than COD June 30, 2006 Gallarate Diego (Italy) 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Well, I'm not a fan of shoot'em up: I rather prefer to play the realistic Battlefront's Combat Mission, or Shanghai! But I'm a wwii buff as well, so I was intrigued by COD and expecially about the sets and the 3d graphics: some of those missions were too much doom-like, tanks were too much fancyful and other moments were plainly too arcade like, but fun! This new sequel is more realistic, somehow: there are no labirynth like missions, the FX improvements are great, both graphics as for the mechanics of the game; to conclude I'm running the game on a DP 1 GHz quicksilver, Titanium GeForce and 1.5 GB RAM: a good system, but not up to date technology; still I can enjoy the game smoothly and at full option, almost. I would have liked maybe a set of 100 mission, but 'what do you want for nothing: rubber biscuit?!'
great game August 17, 2006 Scott Gonzales (San Diego, CA USA) 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Recently made the switch to Mac- played this on an intel imac 20. Its my first made-for-mac game. No technical/performance issues whatsoever (didn't use multiplayer features). Even tried setting all gfx options to highest possible settings- still no problems. As far as gameplay- I don't typically play shooters, but enjoyed this game. Excellent gfx & sound. I liked the very quick restarts at the last auto-save point whenever you get killed. The length of each level within a mission is fairly short: minimizing the amount of do-overs.
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