The Enclave then goes after them and Hulk fighting robots Enclave Rick Jones to get some time to escape. When the Enclave tracks the device to the building in which the data has Rick Jones, the Hulk defends the building to get Rick some time to come.
With the help of a countermeasure, Hulk heads towards one of the buildings that contain a siphon energy system. When the shield around the antenna falls, Hulk goes to the ceiling.
Upon receiving the news that the Enclave is putting another antenna control in Time Square, Hulk goes there and fighting the Enclave soldiers under the control of Bi-Beast.
After the antenna is destroyed, Hulk locking battle with Bi-Beast and destroys it, before tearing his head, revealing his mechanical interior. Hulk then goes to destroy the generators earthquake on buildings to stop earthquakes. The Enclave turns white after Hulk with an orbital laser that is synchronized over Manhattan. With the help of Rick Jones, the Hulk scale building with the satellite dish control and destroys Hulk continues his crash into Central Park.
Bruce is contacted after the test results show that there is no cure for his condition, but say you can try if Hulk can get parts Loader Gamma from three places, a deposit of Enclave, a building belonging to the Enclave, and troop transport. Samuel Sterns plan on using Gamma Loader to raise levels of gamma Hulk. Hulk does that and keeps the Enclave soldiers take him back.
Rick finds the stolen device and sends Hulk to that location. The Enclave plan to use the computer to boost its mutants troops. As Rick incapacitates from his helicopter, Hulk clean the area so that Rick can land. Bruce Banner then heads off to college where his former research data are only for Betty Ross get them before everything is removed by his father. Bruce sights Emil Blonsky indicating that the army of General Ross is here.
When the soldiers grab Betty Ross, Bruce turns into the Hulk and attacks the army deployment points. Hulk then ends in another fight with Emil Blonsky who received treatment that gives enhanced skills.
Hulk manages to defeat him and escapes with Betty. With still alive Emil, General Ross give orders Emil some medical attention. Betty tells Bruce that his father is going to attack the Enclave base and underestimate its power. Hulk then heads to protect the General Ross and finally ends with the forces of the Enclave, and one of its bases. When a soldier reports that overcame Banner, General Ross says do not need your help. Hulk then fighting the Enclave soldiers to prevent them from technology Hulkbuster built by Stark Industries.
Hulk manages to repel them. Hulk then Hulkbusters helps fight the Enclave soldiers and a floating platform Enclave. Published: 7 days ago. Published: 1 week ago. Published: 2 weeks ago. Your email address will not be published. Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.
This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Download NOW. After my last encounter with comic book hero, the talentless act of vandalism that was Wolverine's Revenge, Hulk comes across as a highly-polished title.
But the truth is that this is a very simple and repetitive action game. The Hulk has never been about brains, but even for a smash 'em up game, what passes as a plot is almost insulting. You start off being attacked by the army in the middle of the desert, then as Bruce Banner you break into a research lab, see another scientist get hulked up with gamma rays and then spend the rest of the game chasing him and swatting soldiers left, right and centre.
The few moments you don't spend pounding them to a pulp are when you control Bruce in a stealthy, sub-Metal Gear mode, that is just too dull to work. Sadly, these sections are so signposted they feel like tutorials: hiding places, levers and computer terminals are highlighted with big green arrows, just in case you're too stupid to figure out what to do.
For all the lack of depth in the gameplay, there is something undoubtedly cool about controlling this huge beast. You can pick up cars and throw them at helicopters, smash the ground to cause shockwaves, throw people across the room, jump high in the air and send out beams of gamma radiation.
But it gets boring very quickly, partly because the enemies hardly change at all, and partly because the plain cardboard box environments make it less thrilling to demolish everything in sight. Then there are the two problems that seem to hound every console game slapped on to a PC. First, the camera rarely points in the direction you want it to and, though you can see things through a useless first-person perspective, you have no control over the third-person view.
Secondly, you shouldn't even consider playing this unless you have a decent joypad. There's no mouse support and trying to control the Hulk with a keyboard is a waste of time. But then, it's not as if they needed a quality game to shift copies. The Hulk does a marvelous job capturing this dark hero's destructive essence. Every completely interactive smash-em-up level is packed with cars, pipes, and concrete slabs you can use to carve swaths of carnage through General Ryker's cronies.
And considering the game might've sold well even if punching were the extent of its pissed-off protagonist's talents, being able to toss oil tankers through research center walls is a welcome break. Furthermore, you're rarely forced to fight every lackey who irritates you, and by ignoring them, you'll reach your objectives faster not that some of you won't want to pulverize the saps. Such features aren't exactly awe-inspiring, but they keep the Green Goliath's rampage fast-paced and satisfyingly furious.
Sadly, when the Hulk transforms back into mild-mannered Bruce Banner, the game takes a turn for the insipid. Banner's game of hide-and-seek will bore you. And avoiding detection is a crapshoot--I've been spotted from 20 yards by guards with their backs turned, but strolled right under others' noses.
They're so infuriatingly cheap, you'll want to Hulk-smash your controller. Try renting if, unlike me, you can control your temper. Like Bruce Banner and his alter ego, The Hulk is a game with a split personality. It's a visually cool ride especially when you're destroying stuff with an excellent cinematic feel and decent brawling control. But after the first few bits as the infamous jolly green giant, it's just wave after wave of the same guards, inexplicably large dogs, and not a whole lot of variety.
Like Shawn, I found that you're better off running past the never-ending enemy hordes than gambling your remaining lives by staying to fight. The Banner bits break it up with some light stealth and move the story along, but the package never quite comes together into a cohesive whole. Give it a rental after you see the flick, but it's a keeper only for serious Hulk-heads.
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