Spycraft - The Great Game![]() On the whole this works well. To achieve your task you need to use a range of technical tools - for instance cleaning up a spy satellite photograph or setting up a photo-fit picture of a suspect. At the same time you must manage your communications on a web-linked PDA, interview suspects and informants and generally stay alive. This last is supported by the least convincing part of the game, poorly executed shooting gallery segments with little real skill involved. I found that Spycraft did pull me in and make me want more, though I was uncomfortable with the way that the outcome of some of the puzzles was little more than guesswork, realistic though this may be. After a time, too, the tasks became a little tedious - again, perhaps too realistic. One novel feature is the online option, which downloads extra information for your game PDA and gives you the option of linking through to a special web site (though sadly on your usual browser rather than Spycraft itself). In practice this proved more of an irritation than a benefit. Overall - A heavyweight spying simulation for Windows 95 or DOS with plenty of activities and a clever interface, let down by uninspiring shooting sections. Priced around ú35 to ú40 In the UK. Produced by Activision, web site: http://www.activision.com |