About The Game
BloodRayne: Terminal Cut is a very dated game in many ways. The camera is stuck to Rayne’s back and controls better with a mouse and keyboard than a gamepad. You can certainly play it the latter way if you want to though. Plus, there’s Xinput support now! The combat will be underwhelming if you’ve never played the game before, but the gameplay has honestly held up just fine, I think. Fighting is more like an ARPG than a character action game, as you’ll mostly be mashing the attack button while trying to dispatch enemies before they can put you down. Rayne fights with her arm blades and kicks, resulting in a lot of heads, limbs, and torsos getting severed.
One of BloodRayne: Terminal Cut‘s most unique elements is that Rayne heals by drinking the blood of her foes. You can leap onto any humanoid non-elite enemy at any time and Rayne will drink them dry until they plotz. It kind of makes enemies horribly non-threatening, but it’s a neat power fantasy option. Rayne often needs this to survive, as the enemy she’s feeding on will provide cover. It’s still immensely entertaining to leave a hallway covered with the corpses of a dozen Nazis after feeding your way through them. Rayne can also slow down time, which massively helps with keeping her alive.
The visuals are clearly that of a game from 2002, but the texture work has held up surprisingly well. Everything is high resolution and nicely rendered, including major character models. Rayne herself and her outfit are surprisingly detailed, considering. The game can be a bit clunky and frustrating, plus only being able to save during level transitions is unwelcome. All in all though, I’d say that BloodRayne: Terminal Cut is worth it for anyone who enjoys silly vampire action and doesn’t already have it for free in their library.
System Requirements
OS:-Windows 7, 8, 10
Processor:-Intel Pentium 4 @ 2.6GHz
Memory:-2GB RAM
Graphics Card:-1GB VRAM
Hard Disk:-12GB Space
Screenshots of the Game
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