007 - all or nothing

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007 - all or nothing
007 all or nothing.svg
Studio United StatesUnited States EA Redwood Shores (PS2, Xbox, GameCube) Griptonite Games (GBA)
United StatesUnited States
Publisher United StatesUnited States Electronic Arts
Erstveröffent-
lichung
Game Boy Advance November 17, 2003 December 5, 2003 PlayStation 2 , Xbox , GameCube February 17, 2004 February 27, 2004
North AmericaNorth America
European UnionEuropean Union

North AmericaNorth America
European UnionEuropean Union
platform PlayStation 2 , Xbox , GameCube , Game Boy Advance
Game engine id tech 3
genre Third person shooter
Subject Action , racing game
Game mode Single and multiplayer
control Game controller
medium DVD-ROM ( PS2 , Xbox)
Nintendo Optical Disc (GameCube)
4 GBit cartridge ( GBA )
language German
Age rating
USK approved from 16
USK released from 12
PEGI recommended for ages 12+
information The version for the Game Boy Advance is approved by the USK for ages 12 and up.

007 - All or Nothing (original title James Bond 007: Everything or Nothing ) is a video game from Electronic Arts . It was EA's third game to use the James Bond license without a film with a fictional story. The American screenwriter Bruce Feirstein was responsible for the plot of the game.

action

Dr. Katya Nadanova is a specialist in the field of nanotechnology . A general kidnaps her and steals a robot made with this technology. Bond can save her, secure the robot and kill the general. The scientist, however, plays a double game and meets with Nikolai Diavolo, a student of the late Max Zorin (the antagonist from James Bond 007 - In the Face of Death , played by Christopher Walken ), who is planning to get revenge on Bond and to construct a tank with nanotechnology in order to be able to take over power in Russia with a coup . This vehicle is to be used en masse as an instrument to keep the Russian army in check. Bond follows his trail over the USA to Peru and gets u. a. Department Q provided a Porsche Cayenne equipped with the usual special weapons, including the cloaking device of the Aston Martin from James Bond 007 - Die Another Day . Bond also meets an old friend, the Beisser , again. In the end there is a showdown on Red Square in Moscow , where Diavolo starts a major attack with his tanks. Bond can take over one of these tanks and destroy the other models before they have decimated the Russian armored vehicles.

Willem Dafoe as Nikolai Diavolo

Real role models of the 3D characters (cast)

technology

  • The console version was played from the third person perspective . This concept was last used in the game Tomorrow Never Dies (1999) . James Bond has a life bar that he can also protect with protective vest armor.
  • For technical reasons, the version for the Game Boy Advance can only be played from a bird's eye view.

equipment

In All or Nothing , fantasy names were no longer used for the weapons.

As in the previous games, the Golden Gun from Scaramanga can also be used.

particularities

  • The GameCube can be connected to the Game Boy Advance via a Gameboy Advance cable and thus also the two game versions for the different game stations. The screen of the Gameboy Advance provided hidden clues at certain points in the GameCube game.
  • The title song Everything or Nothing was interpreted by the singer Mýa .

criticism

The game magazine 4Players rated the game as "very good" and judged: "All or Nothing has succeeded as the first Bond game ever to project the flair of the films almost perfectly onto the game world without forgetting the fun of the game."

The website gamecaptain.de called the game a “must-buy for bond and action fans” and gave it a rating of 90 percent.

The website gamezone.de rated the game with 8.5 out of 10 points and said “Friends of the British secret agent should definitely have fun with Bond's latest adventure, but casual gamers can also take a look”, but “must” you can already be a friend of scripted processes, which are teeming with in the game. "

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Test: James Bond 007: All or nothing on 4players.de , accessed on November 2, 2012
  2. Test: James Bond 007: All or nothing on gamecaptain.de , accessed on November 2, 2012
  3. James Bond 007: All or Nothing in the Gamezone test on gamezone.de , accessed on November 2, 2012