Dead To Rights 1 Portable PC Game Full Version Free Download with Information, Trailer and System Requirement:
If you're looking for a unique twist on the single-player PCshooter, then Dead to Rights is worth your while.
Dead to Rights is about a K-9 cop named JackSlate, who does what he can to keep the peace in a criminal cesspool calledGrant City. At the beginning of the game, Slate and his trusty dog Shadow areinvestigating a mysterious construction site. There, Slate discovers thatsomeone very close to him has been murdered. Against direct orders, he sets offto find some answers and to seek revenge. The story, as told through Jack'sdeadpan narration and the occasional CG cutscene, seems pretty straightforwardat first. During the course of the game, however, it actually takes some decenttwists and eventually becomes quite involving. The best that can be said for itis that, unlike most stories in games, this one does a commendable job of tyingup all its loose ends before the credits roll.
Superficially, Dead to Rights unquestionablyresembles Max Payne. This is mostly because that game, like Dead to Rights, isclearly inspired by a certain breed of action movies, the most notable of whichis probably The Matrix. Like Max Payne, Dead to Rights is the tale of afugitive cop who's apparently fighting alone in his war against a sinister,corrupt organization. Even the game's respective main characters have a lot incommon. Their names sound alike, their dialogue is hammy and melodramatic, theyshrug off bullet wounds, they shoot rapidly with two pistols at once, and whenthey leap through the air, all the action around them slows down. That's a lotof similarities, but that's also where the similarities end.
Dead to Rights plays differently from MaxPayne--and from most other action games, for that matter. Most of the gameconsists of third-person action sequences in which Slate has to gun downcountless foes before reaching his next objective. Just as the plot in Dead toRights offers up a few surprises, so does the gameplay. Simple yet inventiveminigames frequently figure into the action, as Slate will have to do all kindsof things, from disarming bombs to lifting weights to picking locks. Theseminigames rely on precise timing and/or button mashing, and they make for fundiversions. Also, Slate will have to fight unarmed in a number of sequences.Fortunately, he can switch to unarmed combat in the middle of a gunfight.
There's a lot to say about the action in Dead toRights because Slate is a versatile fighter. He can carry a number of differentfirearms at once, and the game features a wide selection of real-world pistols,shotguns, submachine guns, assault rifles, sniper rifles, and more. He'lltypically salvage these from fallen foes, but he wastes no time reloading,opting instead to coolly toss aside depleted weapons. Aiming in Dead to Rightsis automatic. You just press and hold the right mouse button, and Slate willdraw a bead on the closest foe. Once that enemy goes down, you press the rightmouse button again to find your next target. You can also opt to manually aimfrom a first-person perspective. This rarely figures into play, though you'llsometimes need to do so when using sniper rifles.
We experienced a major bug in the first level ofthe game, which prevented us from playing any further. Publisher Hip Gamesquickly addressed the problem with a patch, and the rest of the time we spentwith the game was spent without incident. Or, rather, it was spent without anyadditional technical foibles, as the game itself is full of"incidents" and pure action. Though Dead to Rights looks like awatered-down port of an aging console game (in fact, its looks were never itsstrong suit), its gameplay still holds up and survives the translation intact.It's not just another cookie-cutter shooter but plays differently in a numberof key ways. So if you're looking for a unique twist on the single-player PCshooter, then Dead to Rights is worth your while.