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Starcraft II

For those of you who don’t know, the sequel to one of the biggest real-time strategy (RTS) games of all time, Starcraft, has been 12 years in the making. The game is made up of three races: Terran (humans), Protos and Zerg.

The three races are three versions of popular science-fiction race types: humans in cool space-suits, Zerg (like the aliens in the Alien movie series) who are a hive like breed of species, and the Protoss, who are kind of like the Predator with an intelligent, elderly statesmen kind of feel.

The first game has a single-player version with just the Terran storyline and then the multiplayer with all three races. The Zerg and Protoss single-player versions will be released as expansion packs.

Now firstly, you’ll need a PC that can play the game. This requires something in the region of a Dual Core 2.4 GhZ Processor, 2 GB of Ram and GeForce 8800 GTX of Radeon HD 3870 graphics card.

If you’re wondering what’s the attraction of the game, well firstly the videos cut scenes in the game and the actual characters in the between missions segments are so life like, you could almost be watching a movie.

Check out this video clip below to see some of the people and aliens they have created.

Then the single-player Terran campaign is so easy that anyone can really pick it up. Obviously you can scale up the difficulty and this can be done at the start of any mission, but the point is, this game is very accessible. And if you’ve never played an RTS game, then there are tutorials to help out.

In the game you’ll start off with easy missions to get used to controlling units and then move onto building bases and using the various upgrades in game, acquiring cash and using it to purchase more upgrades in between each mission.

The game is well-paced as well so you still get a RTS feel of building up a base and different units with different upgrade options, but you won’t have to spend too long getting things ready either before you take on the enemy.

Starcraft II Gameplay

The storyline diversifies nicely giving you various options to pursue making it feel less linear. You build up from marines and firebats to tanks and ships and ultimately nuclear weapons.

The real ground-breaking part of this game is the multiplayer aspect. Firstly, despite South Africa being miles away from most other gaming nations, you can now finally play gamers from overseas without the game lagging.

Furthermore, Starcraft II connects to Blizzard’s BattleNet servers which will rank you and pair you off with appropriately skilled opposition. Though this has been tried before, Blizzard looks like they are finally getting it right too.

This will extend the game’s life into literally hundreds of hours of gameplay. And while gaming is bigger than movies and music globally, it’s games like Starcraft II that are going to take gaming to the masses.

So don’t think you need to be some brilliant 23-year-old who can click faster than you can think — now gamers of all ages and experience levels will be able to slot in and play with other gamers at the appropriate experience levels.

You’ll also be able to add other gamers to your friends list and interact with them. It’s like rolling Facebook, watching a DVD and gaming all into one. And all for under R500.

If you’ve never gamed before, spend the couple of thousand rand to buy or upgrade your PC, buy the game and start playing it. It will open up a whole new world to you.




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8 Responses to “Why Starcraft II’s important”

The gameplay is addictive, the graphics are detailed without being superfluous and it’s an all round awesome game. Well worth investing in. I can’t wait for the Zerg and Protoss campaigns.

(Report abuse)

Sarai on August 5th, 2010 at 2:52 pm

woooooooooooooooooooow

(Report abuse)

Dlomen on August 6th, 2010 at 10:53 pm

[…] Top 5 CheatsProduct Reviews (blog)StarCraft II ReviewXomba (blog)OfficialWire (press release) -Tech Leader -MyNews.in (blog)all 22 news […]

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StarCraft II – Destructoid | world of starcraft on August 8th, 2010 at 10:37 pm

Lets see now – 100s of hours of game-play. Cool.

Now, what if we stopped the PC game thing and actually played “the game of life”. If you put in 100s of hours into relationships, self-improvement, learning a skill, what would you get? As opposed to sitting on your ass for 100s of hours shooting aliens with some guy in America calling himself RatSalad?

No thanks – keep your games and waste of life-time. When you complete StarCraft win what, exactly?

When I complete my game of life, I win satisfaction. Id rather have a real experience that I participated in, instead of an artificial experience I essentially just watched – oh, and clicked a few mouse buttons and learn to defeat aliens. Imagine the myriad of useful life-skills you learn while wasting weeks, months of your time playing this.

I appreciate that relaxation and recreation is as part of our psyches as breathing, but is this really the way to go about it?

Is it any wonder the world is turning antisocial?

(Report abuse)

Gerry on September 8th, 2010 at 9:16 am

@ Gerry
Have you ever taken off your tie? have you ever had a beer after work? oh wait that would hamper your real life experience….
What about the person who completed his masters in statistical analysis based on the chances of drawing a set of cards in a Trading card game?
What about the girl who did her Masters in social linguistics based on the words gamers use when speaking in real life?
Have your real life and “win” at the end of it by ending up rotting in the same earth as the gamers you so clearly despise.

IMHO the world is turning antisocial due to people who refuse to let others enjoy themselves and just slam them for no real reason. Yes there are people who take it to far and play 50 hours non stop but there are also those who would just enjoy two hours of game play after work.

(Report abuse)

Herman on September 8th, 2010 at 1:35 pm

@Gerry

Would you consider spending hours and hours training for the Olympics a waste of time? I.e. the olympic swimmer spends all their time in the pool when they could be swimming in the “pool of life”?

And if I choose to swim for an hour every day because I enjoy it, am I wasting my time?

Starcraft II tournaments draw massive volumes of spectators internationally. Players have coaches, and win large prizes.

Local SA tournaments attract hundreds of players and act as a chance for people to meet friends who have similar interests.

Watch this space.

(Report abuse)

Nicola on September 16th, 2010 at 1:47 pm

@Gerry: You are a waste of human breath.

Been playing this game intensely for a few months now. Absolutely brilliant. You just failed to mention that internet access is required for just about everything worthwhile :)

Be aware that you will start thinking about killing yourself once you hit diamond league play.

(Report abuse)

Stephen Browne on October 1st, 2010 at 12:04 pm

Hopefully, now that Starcraft is out, Warcraft 4 will also be released. Can’t wait.

Gerry, its a gamer thing. Not a substitute for real life, no, but far more enjoyable than wasting time watching SABC or playing golf and an infinitely more acceptable way to release feelings of violence than say, killing my boss.

(Report abuse)

Xcepting on October 6th, 2010 at 2:27 pm

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Steve Whitford is the editor of (Do Gaming). After working as a journalist across a number of sectors for a couple of years, he began freelancing and then moved into tech public relations and lastly content generation and Internet strategy. He owns Intrinsic Media, a content and copywriting company.
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