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Jade Empire: Special Edition (PC)

Review By: WoLf | Posted: 03/04/2007
Final Word:
Jade Empire SE for me has stood the test of time, the game looks nice on a decent PC and plays extremely well. It is a couple of years old and worth getting if you have never played the Xbox version - the grainy original FMV lets the whole thing down.


Jade Empires’ transition to the PC has allowed the game to take advantage of much better graphics, things were nice on the Xbox but here they are transformed into a graphical delight. There are some absolutely gorgeous areas and the load times have also been decreased, especially on a high end machine with a good quality graphics card.

Bioware have upped the ante with the locales in this game, the environments come to life with lots of tiny detail and the PC helps here a great deal. As you’d expect there are graphical tweaks and lighting changes, there are better particle effects and the colourful magical powers look just fantastic.

You can also appreciate the detail that has gone into the character models, when the camera pulls in close during conversations the facial animations are a tasty precursor of Bioware’s coming new-tech for the PC and console next-generation, you can see where they have improved on KotoR and on the PC version it is even more apparent. The level of animation in the faces matches the detail and the whole thing comes to life in a much more vivid manner.

The animation in the combats of course is top notch, fluid fight movements are presented at every turn, focus mode allows you to slow down time and get a better grip on combat – it also allows you to see the kind of detail the animators have put into the game’s motion. It fits the feel of the pseudo-martial arts world Bioware have created and nothing is especially jarring.

The music of Jade Empire is sweeping and majestic, with just the right flavour. The sound effects are certainly top notch and the voice acting has some famous cameos including performances by Nathan (Malcom Reynolds) Fillion and a few others. The game brims with lots of spoken dialogue and it’s delivered perfectly with very little in the way of vocal errors or flaws.

The new content adds enough to the old game to make it stand shoulder to shoulder, the graphical additions make sure it keeps the look and feel of the console version but for the PC generation. It is of course still two years old (approx) and has stood the test of time very well in that respect.

All this praise of course has to have a downside and its here that I have to mention the use of grainy FMV that is a left over from the Xbox; it really looks bad when compared to the new shiny graphics. The 1942 style top down shooter that you get to play when you fly from place to place in your ‘flyer’ slams you out of the wonderful world and reminds you – it’s just a game.

I’d have preferred to see a shiny FMV filter for the game’s cut-scenes and definitely some pre-rendered footage for the top down shooter, at least you can ignore it after you’ve played it just the once. I tended to do that in the Xbox version as well to be honest, it was a part I could have done without.

All in all though the PC special edition of the game is a worthy addition to the library of titles and it’s a definite must for Bioware fans and action/RPG fans alike.
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Game Details:
Publisher: N/A
Developer: N/A
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Genre: Role Playing
Release Date: 26th February 2007
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