While Cabela certainly lets you do this, the act of killing a five-star the best in the game buck doesn't quite feel as satisfactory when you realize that you're running over a small hill as you pull the trigger.
It's sort of like playing a first-person shooter with truly mindless enemies. To make matters even less realistic there's the Hunter's Sense ability. It's not a power up so you can use it as often as you like, and because of that it nearly breaks the game entirely. By pressing T by default players are given targets over all of their future prey. Whether they're behind a tree, a mountain, under dirt, wherever they are, you'll be able to see them and, more importantly, shoot at them.
That means that fleeing deer are never safe, they could be running through a thick forest in hopes of finding safety, only to have you use Hunter's Sense and pick 'em off from the distance. There were several times when I never even saw my actual target, I just used Hunter's Sense and started firing.
At most this ability should have been governed for thirty seconds of use per hunt, rather than at the player's whimsy. The biggest problem with Trophy Buck actually isn't the power ups or Hunter's Sense, in fact the act of hunting the range of animals - you'll stalk deer, geese, ducks, bunnies, and even squirrels - is pretty fun, but it's the overall technical shortcomings and inadequacies that ruin this game.
Try maneuvering through the environment, something that you'd think would be easy. After all, you're just walking for crying out loud. Sadly you're constantly maneuvering around invisible barriers that not only make the playable area claustrophobically small, but they also make it annoying to do the simplest of tasks.
Luckily fleeing animals will occasionally get stuck on these barriers too, making it all the easier to plant lead in their side. Then there's the design of the single mode of play, Career Hunt. That's right, no arcade mode or multiplayer of any kind to be found. Despite the combination of names, Big Game Hunter Trophy Buck is nothing more than a port of the console version of Trophy Bucks and features no elements from the newly released Big Game Hunter. Now back on the topic of games modes: Career Hunt has absolutely no continuity to it.
You are randomly warped to different hunting spots within a state until you clear it. There's no how close you are to completing a state, no graphic that pops up telling you that you've completed a state, and now that there's no achievement pop-ups as there were on Xbox there's really no way to tell when you've completed a full section of the game. When you do complete a stage not a full state, just a stage you'll be given a gold, silver, or bronze medal depending on what kind of a score you achieved, but there's really no incentive to getting a gold medal on a stage.
You don't get any fancy new guns or attachments, just a shiny gold medal to call your own. Other mishaps within Big Game Hunter Trophy Buck include a graphics engine that brings respectable looking trees but forgets how to render just about everything else in the game. Every other texture is either muddled, bland, or just plain bad. The game runs fairly smooth, but we were using our powerhouse Alienware computer with settings put to the max. Other machines might have to dumb things down a bit, and for that we are sorry given the rugged look of BGH TB on our rig.
If you have all the money in the world and are starved for some good old fashioned deer, duck, and turkey killing then feel free to pick up Cabela's Big Game Hunter Trophy Buck. The game has a sliver of fun underneath its technically defunct outer shell, but only diehards of the hunting genre will want to take the time to find it, and even then, it will likely be too arcade-like for their diehard playing habits. BGH TB greatest acronym ever? Was this article informative? We can only offer a 30 day warranty on these items for our commercial clients operating the games on free play.
Price Does Not Include Shipping. Qty Order. Big Buck Hunter Safari transports players to a big-game safari across the continent of Africa. Players experience 15 unique hunting treks, stretching from desert dunes through grassy savannas to the lush jungles in search of the "Big Game". In this version, players will also find several new critters to hunt including Meekest, Chameleons, Frogs, Hyenas, Warthogs and spiders just to name a few.
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