0
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z




Macintosh : Master of Orion III Reviews

Below are user reviews of Master of Orion III and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Master of Orion III. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.







User Reviews (81 - 91 of 116)

Show these reviews first:

Highest Rated
Lowest Rated
Newest
Oldest
Most Helpful
Least Helpful



The bad posts speak for themselves, but...

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 3 / 5
Date: November 02, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Well if anyone takes the time to read all these (i read most of them) you'll know that your not alone in thinking this game might have been the single greatest crime against humanity since the invention of the paid toilet expectations so high for this game that it disapointed gamers across the contry when it came out. i am really hoping for a MOO4 in the future that can bring this series back to its roots and claw its way out of the grave that it buried itself in. I will research the game before i buy it definitly. I just feel that if this game was released by Microprose all of our lives (and our wallets) might have been spared. i seriously had one eye become moist when i discovered the complete horrid truth; that this game blows. the first day i got this game i poped it in learned most of the controls and stuff and about 5 hours later i had this mind bending migraine that you wouldnt believe. granted i didnt want to give up on a series of games that i loved, so i kept at it for a couple more weeks......... then i lamentfully searched for the only funtion on this game that should be used. The Uninstall icon.

Only get this game if you have an incredable threshold for pain. I'm talking about the kind where you can saw your own foot off lodged in a bear trap using only a plastic knife and some duct tape.

How to understand the previous ratings

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 12
Date: July 14, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Well... Say that people usually don't like spending hours to learn and are not really patient to get to action. Like strategy games? Like complex games? Like micro-management? Would sacrifice graphics for the content of the game? If you answered yes to the previous 4 questions you will give 5 stars to that game for each 'no' take off one star, the last star is just overall satisfaction.

Not for everyone but....

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 4 / 9
Date: April 16, 2003
Author: Amazon User

First of all, you have a much better chance of enjoying this game if you've played MOO II. ABSOLUTELY DO NOT buy this game if:
a. You don't like to think (i.e. play FPSes all the time)
b. You don't have a lot of free time
c. You like to learn a game in 15 minutes and beat it the first day.
d. You dislike complex turn based strategy games (like Alpha Centauri)
e. You are looking for games with top-notch graphics

That being said, I think this is an awesome game. Some people complain that the AI does everything - well, it only does if you tell it to. I like to have control of everything, so I pretty much disabled all of my empire's AI. Whether you want to micromanage or not is irrelevant - MOO3 accomodates.

I won't lie - the graphics are not a selling point. In combat, ships are really tiny and so you can't see many details. The UI is okay in terms of looks.

The manual isn't very useful either. That's why someone made an exceedingly useful in-game Encyclopedia Mod. Pop that in and you can answer most of your questions in game.

The game isn't bug-lacking either. However, one patch is out and a second one should be arriving shortly.

This game has a massive learning curve (not too bad if you're MOO2 familiar). A lot of people played it for 30 minutes, then said "This game is horrid." It grows on you - I guarantee it. Once you understand the game it's a blast to play, and you don't need a high end computer either.

Unfortunately, because of this game, I have no life anymore. This is partially because I love it but mostly because it takes forever. I've never finished a game but spent about 3 hours getting to turn 100 and an average game can go 300 or more turns. You won't get the fun out of this game unless you have a lot of time for it.

So, overall, it's an acquired taste. You love it or hate it.

Junk ...

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 3 / 6
Date: June 21, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Don't buy this game ... The design is horrible ... It's almost a fraud to release a game in this shape ... You don't understand what is happening, the game play itself and there's no enjoyement. It's strategy game where cause - effect relations are unclear ...
MOO1 and MOO2 were clearly better than this trash.

One of the best game out there

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 14
Date: April 02, 2004
Author: Amazon User

I just started to play Lords of the realm 3 and have been playing many more games lately (every month a new one). At the same time i've been playing MOO3 continuously for the last 6 months. With the patch 1.25, it's been my favorite game. There are fantastic games out there (Rise of Nations, GALCIV or CIV3 just to mention a few). However, none of these is as deep or have given me so much room for imagination. I am still learning the game, which is great. I guess if chess came out today, it would get the same bad reviews.

Succeeds at standing out.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 14
Date: January 08, 2004
Author: Amazon User

When reading the majority of reviews, both here and elsewhere, I have to ask: Why is there so much open hostility directed toward this game and its developers? It's not just that people dislike it, but they convey a sense of revulsion toward it. I couldn't understand this, but now I think it's because most people have no idea how to even play this game.

To quote a fellow reviewer, "Genius is sometimes misunderstood". They're absolutely right, too. Despite its flaws, and it does have them (What game doesn't?), MOO3 is ingeniously designed. The sheer amount of depth is incredible. Yes folks, I said depth, not complexity. Once you understand the game, getting around the interface and controlling your empire is a snap. The trick is getting to that point. Without a doubt, it's a steep learning curve, but it's a highly rewarding one too.

I'm sure that the main reason people hate this game is because they never 'got it', so to speak. This is *not* MOO, or MOO2. One of MOO2's greatest faults was the sheer amount of micromanagement that accompanied it. Once you had a few dozen planets, handling them all yourself was truly an exhausting task.

Well, that's been done away with in MOO3. Every planet has a Viceroy who will make economic decisions for you, if you wish. They'll also handle the construction of your planets' infrastructure as well as ship building. A primary complaint is "All you have to do is hit the turn button". Well, that's a complete falsehood, and a ridiculous one too. You can outline what are called "Development Plans", which will tell Viceroys how to develop certain planets. You want their primary focus on a mineral rich world to be mining? Just say so in the Dev Plan. How about military development on a frontier world? You got it. You just have to give them some instructions, that's all. They act quite intelligently if you give them something to go on. Trust me, once you've got 20+ planets, you'll be glad that they each have someone governing them. It gives you the time to micromanage your core planets, or get a powerful fleet assembled. The Viceroy AI is a welcome improvement.

The economic model is quite complex, but fortunately you don't have to understand what all goes on under the hood. Some users have written beginner's guides to the game, and one of the developers has even written a guide to the game's economic model and how it works. And it does work. The game is not 'broken', 'unplayable', or 'seriously flawed'. Complaints about diplomacy have been addressed in a patch, which fixes an error in the code that caused the AI to sometimes spontaneously declare war then break it off, over and over. In fact the most recent patch, aside from fixing the bugs, also adds a lot of new features/improvements as well (including a build que lock for your planets). It's now much better than it was on release, and is deserving of five stars in my opinion.

Don't let the 1-star, 'this game is terrible, because I don't like it', reviews sway your decision. The only people I know personally who don't like MOO3 either aren't fans of TBS games, or have never played past turn 30. This game won't blow you away. The graphics do their job, quite well too, but they aren't terriffic. The point is that this game has achieved what very few today actually strive for: Depth. This is one you can sit down with and really get into. You just have to be open-minded and willing to tackle its learning curve. But once you do, I doubt you'll settle for anything less.

Time

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 4 / 10
Date: August 31, 2006
Author: Amazon User

It takes allot of time to play this game. If you select a large galaxy with many races expect up to or over 1000 turns easy.

Love it though.

All Work and No Play

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 2 / 3
Date: October 14, 2003
Author: Amazon User

My advice, don't touch this game, even if you get the game for free. That is, unless you enjoy spending hours and hours and hours... being frustrated as you toil away. After "playing" mooIII for a couple of weeks, I felt I should have been given a paycheck.

Try Galactic Civilizations instead

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 2 / 3
Date: September 26, 2003
Author: Amazon User

I should have taken it as a sign when the rebate earlier in the summer (2003) meant that Amazon was giving this game away for free.

This game is too complicated and not enough fun. I loved MOO II and hoped to find this as an improvement. It's a huge step backwards in playability and the game does not seem to be particularly stable.

There are a lot of interesting concepts in the game that are poorly implemented. The interface is not easy to decipher and I finally gave up.

Fortunately, I found Galactic Civilizations instead. The AI, game play, and support and all excellent. I'd recommend spending your money on that instead.

Still a spreadsheet

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 2 / 3
Date: August 26, 2003
Author: Amazon User

Bought game, found it to be a mess. Got patch. Less of a mess and now it's apparent it's just not a fun game. After the greatnest of MOO 1 and MOO 2 it's incredible that somethign this bad got out the door.


Review Page: Previous 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Next 



Actions