Too Human Xbox 360
Xbox 360
Av. User Rating
Step into the world of Too Human, the next-generation third-person epic action-game from famed developer Silicon Knights.… See more
Av. User Rating
Released on 29/08/2008
Step into the world of Too Human, the next-generation third-person epic action-game from famed developer Silicon Knights. As the Cybernetic God Baldur, Too Human players are thrust into the midst of an ongoing battle that threatens the existence of mankind. In Too Human, an ancient machine presence has forced the God's hand. In the first of a three part Too Human trilogy, Baldur is charged with defending mankind from an onslaught of monstrous war machines bent on eradication of human life.
In Too Human, players are treated to a non-stop barrage of action powered by the seamless integration of melee and ranged firearms combat and fueled by breathtaking visuals now possible thanks to a powerful combination of the Xbox 360 and the Unreal Engine 3. Battles unfold in awesome scale as Too Human players engage with vast numbers of enemies.
Too Human Features:
- Synergy of Melee and Firearms Combat: It'll take more than brawn and raw strength to supplant the machine hordes. Utilise Too Human's sophisticated blend of seamless melee and firearms combat to vanquish foes close and far. Feel each punishing blow through Too Human's advanced visual effects made possible through the unmatched horsepower of Xbox 360 and the Unreal Engine 3.
- Advanced Cinematic Presentation: Characters and environments come to life with unparalleled visual fidelity. Experience the full excitement of Too Human's combat through a dynamically-driven presentation system that portrays the combat with cinematic quality. A sweeping orchestral score sets the mood for heartbreak, anger and bloodlust as each tune in Too Human encapsulates the gamer within Too Human's immersive gaming environment.
- Intuitive Combat Provides New Level of Accessibility: Perform Baldur's elaborate and complex combat maneuvers through the press of a button and chain together Too Human's rapid-fire Too Human provides gameplay that is easy to learn and rewarding to master. Too Human will introduce combinations of weapons combat on a level that exceeds some fighting games leaving players in awe.
- Modern Take on a Classic Story: Too Human chronicles the ongoing struggle between Cybernetic gods, machine giants and mortal men on a massive scale never before seen. Play the role of a cybernetic god charged with protecting the human race against a relentless onslaught of machines.
-
Norse to be here, to be here...
It's right to be wary of Too Human. We've waited nigh-on nine years for this Diablo-esque action epic - it was originally destined for the first PlayStation - and recent demos have narrowed our eyes with suspicion.
But we can relax those eye muscles now. What's emerged here is an intoxicating flurry of swords, guns, goblin armies and really angry cybernetic Norse gods.
I am legend
You're Baldur, a cybernetically spruced-up god bloke, tasked with looking after a human race besieged by murderous machines. The world and events are based on a futurised version of Norse mythology. It's a vivid and bewitching setting, supported by a mighty orchestral score and some astonishing environments. We could do without waiting 30 seconds for a Valkyrie to lift us up to Valhalla every time we die, but still.
Furious, frenzied stuff that melds the violence of Devil May Cry with the intensity of Dynasty Warriors.
Combat is interesting. As you lead your little squad of humans through their worst nightmares, you simply push the right analogue stick where you want to attack and Baldur lunges and slashes automatically. Alternatively, hold the right trigger to make Baldur aim and shoot. Kill enough of the spider-archers, dark elf snipers and exploding goblins and your throbbing combo meter lets you unleash a devastating godly smart bomb. Imagine a kind of melee-ised Geometry Wars in 3D. With Vikings.
Views to a kill
Inevitably, Baldur's semi-automatic actions lead to targeting niggles. With the analogue sticks busy, the poor camera has to work things out for itself, often with 'hilarious' results. But it's still furious, frenzied stuff that melds the violence of Devil May Cry with the intensity of Dynasty Warriors.
An intoxicating flurry of swords, guns, goblin armies and really angry cybernetic Norse gods.
At its best, Too Human is almost balletic as Baldur darts back and forth between unlucky enemies, rolling and slashing and juggling. And it works a treat in two-player co-op across Xbox LIVE.
There's depth, too. Too Human is a hoarder's paradise of dropped loot, encouraging you to pause and upgrade with an RPG-like inventory of new weapons, armour and arsenal-altering Runes at every turn. The five character classes all add a different spin to gameplay. The Defender barges through crowds with barely a scratch. The Champion juggles enemies like so many oranges, and so on. Later you can even choose between a cybernetic or human evolutionary path.
Playing dumb
It's no Mass Effect, sure. But the depth is exactly the balance the intelligence-free fighting needs. Too Human isn't a button-masher - but sometimes it isn't far off, especially as your enemies come with distressingly low IQs. The underused and over-simplistic Cyberspace areas - where 'puzzles' involve no more than walking in, pressing a button and trotting out again - only reinforce that Too Human often has a gaping hole where its brain should be.
But you'll forgive it for the intensity of the combat and the set-pieces - such as your first boss fight against livid Anglo-Saxon myth-monster GRENDL-1. And you can charge through the game without hitting any walls of frustration. Clever customisation gives you the edge in battle and death just plonks you back where you died to mop up anyone who's left.
Too Human may not be the spectacular Norse legend we'd expect from nine years in the making, but it is thumpingly good fun all the same.
GAME's Verdict
- Meaty combat with a satisfying and unusual control method.
- Quality co-op - you'll be juggling enemies between you like sadistic street performers.
- Your chance to learn all about Norse legend. Albeit a cybernetic version that's probably frowned upon by scholars.
- It's short: expect to see the credits roll after around 14 hours play. But it rewards repeat plays.
- Like puzzles? You won't like Cyberspace much. Although it is mighty pretty.
- The RPG-a-like depth and customisation is there but it's fairly light.
Review by: Mark Scott
Version Tested: Xbox 360
Review Published: 09.09.2008Published: 09/09/2008
-
Baldur's Gait.
It's been a while since we've seen an original IP from Silicon Knights, but the creators of the Legacy of Kain series, Metal Gear Solid: The Twin Snakes and Eternal Darkness have a pedigree that makes their games worth waiting for.
Such a reputation however brings with it great pressure. Perhaps that's why it's taken Too Human, the company's first Xbox 360 exclusive, and one of the first big next-gen announcements of 2005, so long to materialise. It probably also didn't help that they had to start over half way through, building large parts of the game from scratch after a fall-out with Epic Games over use of the Unreal Engine 3.
Shiny and spectacular
We've had some wait then, but with the September release date seemingly set in stone and Silicon Knight's self-built game engine looking shiny and spectacular, it's finally time to take a closer look at what Too Human will offer.
Too Human mixes Norse mythology with futuristic technology and a Lost Planet style gameworld.
What Xbox 360 gamers can certainly expect from Too Human, like a lot of Silicon Knight's previous offerings, is a dramatic story-driven experience. Indeed, Too Human mixes Norse mythology with futuristic technology and a Lost Planet style gameworld, presenting powerful Gods with cybernetic enhancements, helping humanity wage war against a race of machines in a wintry planet full of gothic architecture and mystical forces.
In Too Human you play as one of these Gods, the second son of ODIN, Baldur – who, due to his low level of cybernetic enhancements, has been dubbed by his fellow Gods to be ‘too human' (see what they did there? Nice.) Funnily enough that's an integral part of Too Human's gameplay, with players able to choose from a variety of character classes, customising and enhancing Baldur with a variety of skills and cybernetic mods, which in turn lead to differing combat options.
Treading curiously
That combat is the driving force behind Too Human, with gameplay very much in the vein of a scrolling beat em up. Because of this, Too Human looks to tread a curious line between third-person hack-slash-and-shoot action a la Devil May Cry, and the kind of compulsive character-building and item-hording you'd expect to find in many an RPG. It's easy to see why Too Human is already being compared to dungeon-crawling role-players Diablo and Phantasy Star Online.
Too Human looks to tread a curious line between third-person hack-slash-and-shoot and compulsive character-building and item-hording.
And yet Too Human is intent on being its own game, with Silicon Knights making some unique design decisions. Not least is the fact that melee combat is on the right analogue stick, shooting on the triggers, with jumps, rolls and special attacks on the fascia buttons. It gives Too Human a different feel to something like Devil May Cry, and though the lack of camera in the recent Xbox Live demo does feel initially jarring, you do get used to auto-centring it with a button press. The alternative is moving to the second pulled-back panning camera view, though that doesn't do anything to help immersion.
Despite an impressive five character classes, each with their own sizable skill tree to develop as the adventure progresses, Too Human's success will depend largely on how Xbox 360 gamers take to the relatively repetitive analogue stick fighting, and how much in turn the promise of online co-op adds to the overall experience. The original plan was to have PSO-style four-player questing, but in the end that was lowered to two for the balance of the game. It's a disappointment no doubt, but whether that decision proves damning only playing the final game will tell.
Cautiously optimistic
We hope not, because the cyber Norse premise should be original enough to attract attention, and Silicon Knight's pedigree would suggest that Baldur's journey in Too Human will be an evocative and well-told one. We're not entirely convinced on the showing of the demo, but remain cautiously optimistic.
Preview by: Mark 'Cybernetic' Scott
Preview Published: 18.07.08
Published: 18/07/2008
-
Too Human Review (09/09/2008)
Norse to be here, to be here...
It's right to be wary of Too Human. We've waited nigh-on nine years for this Diablo-esque action epic - it was originally destined for …
See more about ‘Too Human Review’
Too Human Preview (18/07/2008)Baldur's Gait.
It's been a while since we've seen an original IP from Silicon Knights, but the creators of the Legacy of Kain s…
Too Human User Reviews
3 years agoToo Humandont listen to the bad reviews. people say its a short game but that's because there's intended to be more than 1 game. the pricwe is good and controls are good. and it always fun to shoot a cybernetic goblin
3 years agoToo HumanDont believe the people who gave this game bad reviews, they dont know how to play games. This game is a true RPG and if you get hooked into it, you'll play it for hours on end. I only died 8 times in the whole story, which shows you dont die 30 times like people say. The RPG elements are very good, and you can upgrade armor, yourself,weapons and you can even change the colour of weapons and armor. The music is very good also and it beats the boring oblivion music.10/10 A fantastic RPG, only buy if you like RPG's.
4 years agoToo HumanThis game is one of the best games ever and is at a brilliant price
4 years agoToo HumanThis game is very much like marmite,you will either love it or hate it.......................I LOVED it!!!!!5/5
4 years agoToo Humani Bought this for under a tenner and it is awsome. the only flaw i could see is dieing repetedly on end of level bosses and not being able to see enemy gunfire at times the options screen info is impossibe to read and is not always clear as to which weapons or armour you have selected maybe i need a hd ready tv just to understand the layout of the inventoryConfiguring your price alertAs a valued customer we now offer you the facility to sign up to email price alerts. Please enter the price you want to be, or below, and if drops to that level we will let you know...
-
-
New
Out of stock - Only £9.99
-
Free UK Delivery
-
-
-
Preowned
In stock - Only £3.99
-
Free UK Delivery
-
-
Earn 80 reward points
Please note: prices in GAME Stores may differ.
Add to WishListYou have chosen to add this product to your Wish List, but which version would you prefer to add?
Similar Xbox 360 games you may like
-
FIFA 11 (Xbox 360)
- Only £2.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
Dead Island: Riptide (Xbox 360)
- Only £29.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
Forza Motorsport 4 (Xbox 360)
- Only £12.50
-
Av. User Rating
-
Battlefield 3 (Xbox 360)
- Only £12.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
BioShock Infinite (Xbox 360)
- Only £34.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim (Xbox 360)
- Only £14.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
Crysis 3: Hunter Edition (Xbox 360)
- Only £27.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
- Only £32.99
-
Av. User Rating
-
Halo: Reach (Xbox 360)
- Only £12.50
-
Av. User Rating






















































