Thread:Deathstalker666/@comment-1915529-20120712125232/@comment-3547390-20120731061735

Awesome first level! Any gripes with TR1 definately have been fixed by the sequel. It moves fluid, it has a wide variety of traps and such, ect. Also, is it just me or are the secrets easier to find? I found all three for the first level (Great homage to the first game with the final secret, the T-Rex was back and felt a lot harder in the enclosed space as I refused to hide in a corner with Jurassic Park music blasting during the whole fight :P.)

This game already looks promising, hopefully the series continues being good. I have heard some things saying these are the golden years before a long series of negative reviewed games (AOD being the lowest probably), I hope they are not right but I will see for myself.

It is so weird though, TR2 doesn't feel very different at all from 3. The original compared to the sequel was like a DOS operating system to a Windows (which is what they primarily ran on, but I am referring to the ease of use, efficiency, graphics (normally not a pain, it just was the glitches on platforms primarily I refer to), resolutions, ect). It is great to play it in Windows XP, as my 98 insisted upon turning my character right unless I mashed buttons for 5 minutes or so. It is easier and faster to boot up, I can switch between XP and 7 very quickly (98 requires you to press some combination that switches it back to 7 which messes up the game). So I can play music in TR2 while playing during silent moments. I can also import custom game content easier; so I can try that here compared to Windows 98 making me have to import two files that had to be placed in an iso and then loaded into a drive, while switching back so I can play the game.

I cannot say enough praise about TR2.