Product Details
Platform : Windows XP
Binding : Video Game
EAN : 4005209101134
Manufacturer : THQ
Product Group : Video Games
Release Date : 2007-11-23
ASIN : B000X2E36M
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Customer Reviews
Everything you'll ever want in an RTS (2008-10-13)  Of all the years i waited with false hope for TA2, but it came in the form of Supreme Commander and blew me away.Have owned the game before, but bought the gold pack as it was cheaper.BUT be warned there are some problems when operation in Vista but then again if you have a quad core it will make full use of it!
It's worth having the Forged Alliance add-on and buy it in this double pack if it's going cheap (2008-02-13)  My son (11) and I play Supreme Commander a lot, particularly in network mode both in cooperation and competition. This set has both the original Supreme Commander game and the new add-on Forged Alliance. As mentioned above the graphics in Supreme Commander are a bit bland as mostly you are zoomed out in low-res map mode, with your units as just flags. However in the Forged Alliance add-on, the graphics get a boot up in quality and you do see far better droid detail and explosion graphics ... unless you are zoomed out and all the units are flags again. Terrain detail looks a bit more interesting in a Luna landscape sort of way (different to Supreme Commander at least). The game menu and control layout has changed a lot, but all the old commands are in there somewhere.We have NVidia 7950 and 8800 GT graphics, 3-4Gb RAM PCs with fast motherboards and both games do stutter occasionally with the older 7950 card (thats no gaming slouch), but Forged Alliance still looks great. This won't happen on older DirectX 8 graphic cards or integrated 915 Intel graphic chips though as the games will refuse to install anyway. The battle plans and armies are pretty much as the older Supreme Commander and you get a 'new' alien (The Seraphim - the guys wiped out earlier in SC and the inspiration of the classy Human Aeons, followers of The Way). Apparently the Seraphim also occupied other worlds in the Quantum Realm, as you do, and the extermination of their cousins by Human UEF forces has made remainder of the Seraphim frumpy. The Seraphim are only available for control in skirmish and network play (you need another Forged Alliance CD to find that out). You get a few new weapons, e.g. Tech 2 missiles, as well. My son loves the add-on but 'they do attack quite fast even on easy' i.e. it's harder to play than SC, although you can set a time limit before they are allowed to attack. The main downside with the add-on is that we can play Supreme Commander without the CD in the drive, but Forged Alliance needs it's CD in, so you need two licenced FA CDs or more for network play (which is often the most fun). We now have the second CD (and so a third copy of the original Supreme Commander CD thanks to this good value set). Network play is as fun as before, and different enough to justify buying the 2nd Forged Alliance CD, although building major units seems even more agonisingly slow and so often we chose original Supreme Commander for network battles. My son and I are enjoying the Forged Alliance campaign mode, where the Seraphim only seem to be available as the rather crazed enemy. The Seraphim seem to have a very human approach to weapons production though (i.e. their units are as samey as the three humanoid factions), e.g. they have an ACU, a Tech 3 Siege Tank, a Tech 2 air cruiser, a Tech 2 Vishala air transport, an experimental nuke carrying Ahwassa bomber (OK that's a bit new) etc...I bought this double pack despite having Supreme Commander, as it was going for the same price as the Forged Alliance add-on only, so why not get another Supreme Commander game CD free, giving a spare for a second PC or a Mate (and if you haven't got Supreme Commander it's even better value). My son does get crashes on his AMD2 PC with Forged Alliance after skirmish mode, but on my new Intel quad core gaming PC it runs perfectly (more fluid than Supreme Commander even - although it does stutter very badly when zooming in on a really busy area). Unlike my son I don't go for SIMS games like Rome Total War and Settlers IV, I'm more a DOOM3, QUAKE4, Thief III guy, but I find Supreme Commander very compulsive and have been through all the campaigns already. For me (and my son) around £15 for the double pack from Amazon was a steal and I would highly recommend it.
THE WOBBLY MARCH OF THE STRIDERS CONTINUES... (2007-11-27)  The original SupCom was another excellent example of a good game that got too over-hyped for its own good. When it eventually hit the stores, the impression it made did not live up to the expectations (feel free to browse my review on the original game as well).Its main flows were unpractical graphics (great looking yet unplayable when zoomed-in - whereas, the zoomed-out warfare views were bland and generic), as well as strategically irrelevant ground characteristics. Luckily, SupCom-FORGED ALLIANCE is a standalone expansion that THQ obviously worked on improving.As with the original, SupCom-FA demonstrates its strengths when a great number of units is deployed. After all, war is big and ruthless - and this is SUPREME COMMANDER - and not...PRETTY BIG Commander; on the other hand, there is no free lunch in this universe.This expansion sports improved graphics (on both units, shadows and terrain) - but this also means higher system requirements that include the effective need for a Dual-core processor.Just like the original game, SupCom-FA requires a lot of resources to calculate the physics and ballistics in a way that other RTS games would not even touch with a pole.So, when the number of units increases make sure that your system *surpasses* even the RECOMMENDED requirements (provided below):* 3.0 GHz Intel (or AMD equivalent)* 1024 MB of RAM* nVidia 7600 (256MB) (or equivalent)* 6GB of HDD space.Now, even meeting the above, you canNOT rule out stuttering and freezing. A Dual-core processor is, in my experience, essential - and this is a requirement NOT justified by the quality of on-screen graphics. Today, there are many games that do wonders with much lower requirements - and this is where SupCom-FA looses its 5th star.This is a much better deal than buying the expansion for the...same price!With the expansion, supposedly, one was buying all three factions of the original SupCom as well as the new Seraphim faction. At £18 that would have been a good deal; after all, the original SupCom is barely a year old game.However, this Seraphim faction is only available in Skirmishes and Multiplayer, and does NOT have a campaign of its own! And, to add insult to injury, the other three original factions are LOCKED and not available in a Multiplayer - unless one has the original SupCom!This GOLD EDITION, however, contains BOTH games for the price of the expansion and, thus, is a good deal. Waiting for the after-Christmas sales wouldn't hurt though...
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