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It can run every Genesis/Snes game of the planet. =)
Download the emulators and play.
Keep in mind you need the cartridges, or it's piracy.
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timppu: If there was no respawning, then the maps would be quite empty quite soon.
Well respawning isn't a problem, but is it so much effort to not make it happen in an immersion-breaking way if you happen to be near a border?
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clarry: Well respawning isn't a problem, but is it so much effort to not make it happen in an immersion-breaking way if you happen to be near a border?
Yeah there probably could have been better ways to handle it, like respawning after certain amount of time etc.

Anyway, my theory is that it is done that way because of the console versions of Far Cry 2. I'd think it takes much less memory and effort to just "reset" a map (all the enemies, items etc. in it) when you re-enter the map, rather than e.g. trying to keep track of each and every killable/destroyable/pickable item in the whole gameplay world and when it should be respawned. They chose the easiest way for respawn.

Maybe I didn't find the respawning that big a problem because I didn't constantly zig zag back and forth between map borders. I usually went from location A to B for some mission objective, and then maybe came back from B to A. At this later trip I'd then encounter respawn enemies and items, but it would normally be quite a bit later, after I had completed the needed objective at B.

But if you want to freely roam in the area without caring about objectives and then to go back and forth, then yeah I guess it could feel problematic. However, while enemies respawn, so do any useful items too in the same area (ammo, health kits etc.). So sometimes I might even want to trigger respawn in order to get more health and ammo.
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timppu: Far Cry 2 is great. The enemies in FC2 respawn if you enter a new map so if you feel it happened when moving 10 feet, then you were very close to the edge of a map, and went back and forth across the map border.

The enemies (like police, gang members etc.) respawn also on other GTA like games, and I don't see people complaining. After all, that is what Far Cry 2 basically is, a first-person GTA game in Africa. If there was no respawning, then the maps would be quite empty quite soon.

Anyway, quite often you don't even need to fight the enemies in FC2, just speed through with your truck. If some of them follow with their jeep, shoot it down with that big gun at the back of your truck and continue driving. Easy peasy.
It's not THAT they respawn, it's how often.
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EscapeAt: This PC is a Dell Dimension 8200 with these specs:

CPU: Pentium 4 2.00 GHz
RAM: 2 GB RDRAM
Graphic Card: ATI Radeon 9550
OS: SparkyLinux using Wine/PlayOnLinux for Windows games

What games can run on this?
Quite a few older GOG games I think. I had an Athlon 64, Windows XP, 1 GB RAM, nVidia 7600 until a few years back, and was playing games like Beyond Good and Evil, Far Cry, Duke Nukem Manhatten, PoP Sands of Time, etc. on it in 2010-11.
Ehh, too many to list. But for starters and just among those available on GoG, I'd recommend checking out Stardew Valley, Aquaria, Rogue Legacy, and great DOS classics like Duke Nukem 3D and Shadow Warrior Classic. I used to play NWN on a Linux computer with lower specs than yours, but unfortunately the GoG version doesn't support Linux so unless you've got the original discs (and are likely willing to spend quality time installing ancient 32-bit libraries), you'd have to take a chance on Wine. Also, dunno if the remastered versions have increased hardware requirements, but the originals of the various Infinity Engine games (Baldur's Gate, Icewind Dale, etc) are all excellent games and, in their original version at least, should work more than well on your computer.

Among non-GoG games, Blizzard's classics used to run really well on Wine; Warcraft 3 in particular used to be a favorite of mine and it ran as well as any native game, so I'd heavily recommend it. Starcraft ran pretty well, too, but then I never liked that one.

Anything else, I'd check Wine's current compatibility list and see if anything up to about 2004 or so has a GoG version you could snatch up (or is available on eBay for non-crazy prices). Newer games might depend on newer versions of OpenGL which might choke your GPU, so for those you'd have to either ask, or investigate yourself whether your computer can handle it.
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almabrds: It can run every Genesis/Snes game of the planet. =)
I remember being able to run pretty much everything back in 1997. So yeah this is probably right (although some better more accurate emulators are avaliable now)
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almabrds: It can run every Genesis/Snes game of the planet. =)
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rtcvb32: I remember being able to run pretty much everything back in 1997. So yeah this is probably right (although some better more accurate emulators are avaliable now)
He should definitely try these consoles, there's some classics still worth playing.
Maybe the smile made it look like I was joking, but my post was serious.
For Super Nintendo, I recommend him to check ZSNES, it's pretty good.
Have fun op!