Saturday 22 December 2012

Download WWE All Stars (PSP)



Information:
Category: FIGHT
Manufacturer: THQ
Distributor: WWE
Multiplayers: No
Console: PSP
System / Video: NTSC
Language (s): ENGLISH
Release Year: 2011
Number of DVD (s): 1
Size: ISO: 1.49 GB
Patched / Fixed: Yes
Tested on CFW: 5.00 M33-6 and above
Game Review:
WWE All Stars also has a great concept for gameplay, but I think the control scheme trips it up. There are strike and grapple buttons, health bars, finishing move meters and a bunch of other stuff that's simple for a player to look at and understand. That's groovy. Being able to get in and do an awesome powerbomb or charge up a punch is rewarding and how a game designed to capture an audience lured in by Rowdy Roddy Piper should play.
WWE Allstars
WWE Allstars ... big, beefy brawlers beat each other senseless
Professional wrestling has always had a fractious relationship with reality. The action, of course, is fake, but the athleticism, bravery and, often, pain felt by the performers is real. This leads to something of a quandary for games developers hoping to faithfully represent the "sport" – how much of the fantasy do gamers want to buy into?

According to WWE All Stars, the answer is simply: a helluva lot. Best seen as an arcade-style counterpoint to the Smackdown vs Raw series, it's wrestling as seen through the lens of the imagination of an eight-year-old. In 1992. And this is by no means a bad thing.
By focusing in recent years on gritty realism, complexity and depth, THQ's flagship franchise has lost something of the pick-up-and-play simplicity that has made wrestling games so popular in the first place. Their appeal was far broader than the "sports entertainment" itself, offering as they did a dumbed-down beat-em-up experience for those without the dexterity or patience to master the 360 piledriver. Allstars looks to rectify this by offering a spiritual successor to those classic 16-bit titles titles – with a roster, and controls, that everyone will be familiar with.
The premise is simple – 30 or so classic wrestlers (including unlockables and forthcoming DLC) spanning the past 30 years, duking it over across various game modes and arenas just for the sake of duking it out. A story mode and a simple "Fantasy Warfare" option in which similar wrestlers from different eras compete (Andre the Giant vs The Big Show, for example) offer the possibility of prolonged play, but depth is not at a premium here.
What is at a premium is pure, unadulterated fun. The moves are exaggerated, with wrestlers flying through the air and bouncing off the mat like action figures guided by the hand of child. The character models themselves are huge, barrel chested cartoons, and though some take a while to get used to – Ultimate Warrior in particular manages to look even more freakish than his real-life counterpart – the stylised presentation lends itself excellently to the tone of the game.
Poor loading times aside, it's a decently presented package, with what I found to be a reliable and smooth online offering and a nifty create-a-wrestler mode to allow you to add your own favourites to the competition. The video montages that introduce the Fantasy Warfare bouts are particularly pleasing, and crank the nostalgia value up for those in whom the name Macho Man Randy Savage evokes a warm, fuzzy feeling.
Controls are simple and responsive, and seem to pack a more satisfying punch than All Stars' big brother, SvR. Beneath the outer simplicity, though, there's a depth to the fighting mechanics that's hard to fathom without a decent in-game tutorial. Doubtless one will be up on YouTube before long, but it's small exclusions like this that can make All Stars feel just a little too shallow at times. As if (conspiracy theory warning ...) there was a fear that a more exhaustive offering could bleed into SvR's sales.
Finish the single-player modes in a matter of hours and your faced with a disappointing lack of exhibition and multiplayer options. And while the learning curve is tough as you switch up the difficulty, without any decent instruction it there's not much technique to master beyond learning when to press the "counter" button.
All Stars will put a smile on the face of any lapsed wrestling fan pining for the simple, undemanding action of the WWF games of yore. Still, it's hard to justify paying the full RRP for a game that seems to go out of its way to have as little depth as possible.

                                                            Screen shots
                                 
                                 


Game Trailer:
How to Write:
One. Download all parts of the game.
2nd. Join the files with Hj-Split or extract with WinRAR.
3rd. Put your ISO or CSO on your memory card.
4th. Play.

Note:

This is Torrent Download file. You must be Install µTorrent in your System if you dont already have it.
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                                                   Click here to download the game



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