Use destructive weapons and innate mental powers to take on the most feared enemy in the galaxy--Mankind! Play as Crypto, an alien warrior sent to Earth to clear the way for the Furon invasion force. Your mission is to infiltrate humanity, control them, harvest their brain stems and ultimately destroy them. You choose the method--infiltration or disintegration! More...
Dolby Pro Logic II, Analogue - sticks only, Vibration Compatible
Memory size: 138 Kb
Players: 1 Player
Media: DVD
Use destructive weapons and innate mental powers to take on the most feared enemy in the galaxy--Mankind! Play as Crypto, an alien warrior sent to Earth to clear the way for the Furon invasion force. Your mission is to infiltrate humanity, control them, harvest their brain stems and ultimately destroy them. You choose the method--infiltration or disintegration!
You have a range of weapons, including the just-as-painful-as-it-sounds anal probe. You also have a small range of psychic powers, including telekinesis, all of which, along with your weapons and UFO, can be upgraded by collecting people’s brains.
-Turn the tables on the classic Alien vs. Human storyline
-Play from the Alien perspective and finally know what it feels like to have the upper hand
-Arm yourself with a variety of alien weaponry on land or in the air
-Use the Ion detonator, the Zap-o-Matic or even the Quantum Deconstructor to eradicate feeble humans
-Explore and interact with 5 huge environments using alien abilities to manipulate humans into submission
-Take to the skies in your UFO
-Abduct animals, cars, and humans for research, or cause large-scale destruction
-Packed with familiar and popular Sci-Fi references.
Amazon.co.uk Review
It’s rarely a good sign when a game sells itself on its comedy value as much as its gameplay, but although Destroy All Humans! certainly has its problems it’s still a witty and original slice of Sci-Fi hokum.
Cast as an evil, Jack Nicholson sounding, alien called Crypto you are sent out to perform the game’s titular task in a stylised 1950s America, where the game has good fun poking fun at McCarthy era paranoia and the banality of suburban life.
Developed by the same team behind LucasArts’ Mercenaries, there are some obvious similarities between the two games. There isn’t a single giant game world and you can’t go around pinching vehicles but the combat and freedom to explore and destroy virtually anything is very similar. In fact the only vehicle you can pilot is your trusty, and super destructive, UFO, which is parked at a specific spot on each level.