

Similarly, the backgrounds also border on monotonous, due to the desert settings. While the little people running around the screen are, of course, supposed to be drawn to scale, they look like sprites rendered by an Intellivision.
WATCH DUNE 2000 PC
Anyone who has this game for the PC will not likely be buying it for the PlayStation, but even PlayStation owners will find the controls overly busy.īeyond the questionable control scheme, the visuals really highlight how ill-equipped the PlayStation is at handling what are supposed to be high-resolution graphics. When these functions are buried deep in layers of menus configured to the PlayStation controller, they simply add to what is already a traditionally complex interface. PC gamers are used to hot keys and key-specific commands. Although this problem isn't enough to make the game unplayable, it's enough to make it more frustrating.

The majority of the problems facing ports of almost any RTS game are caused by the controls, have been severely compromised to fit on a PlayStation controller.

Despite the game's basic competence at handling the real-time action, it is at its best merely average, and at its worst impractical. Besides warring with the other houses, you must also contend with nature's own monstrous sandworms and with religious zealots called the Fremen. Ultimately, you'll work your way through missions, steering you toward complete dominance of the planet Arrakis' spice mines. Each house has its own technology tree that you must master to conquer the inevitable invading forces. In Dune 2000, you're warring with the other houses over control of the spice mines, which, in typical real-time-strategy-game fashion, is the resource you must harvest to further your other causes, such as building the machines of war. Basically a port of the PC version, Dune 2000 is lackluster at best, because it is a port of a lackluster PC game. Each house has its own strengths and weaknesses, just like the GDI and the NOD, from C&C. You can select from the Atreides, Harkonnen, or the Ordos. In Dune 2000, you play as one of three rival "houses" from Frank Herbert's classic sci-fi book series. For fans of Command and Conquer, Dune 2000 is the sequel to the real-time strategy game that started it all, Dune II.
