Product Details
Manhunt (Xbox)

Manhunt (Xbox)
From Rockstar

List Price: £32.28
Price: £12.99

Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days
Dispatched from and sold by media-4-u

17 new or used available from £2.93

Average customer review:

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #6817 in Computer & Video Games
  • Brand: Rockstar Games
  • Released on: 2004-04-23
  • Rating: Suitable for 18 years and over
  • ESRB Rating: Adults Only
  • Platform: Xbox

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Manhunt is perhaps the most violent, amoral video game ever made and it’s entirely unapologetic about it. Produced by the same team that created Grand Theft Auto, it sees you cast as a death row inmate reprieved from the chair to take part in a sick game run by a snuff movie producer. You're forced to sneak around a series of maze like levels killing "hunters" and SWAT team members as you go, using such unsavoury methods as suffocating them with a plastic bag and cutting their throats with a shard of glass. The game is primarily a stealth based title, using many of the same techniques as Metal Gear Solid--you shuffle around walls, peer round corners and use noise to attract and distract the enemy.

This aspect of the game works extremely well thanks to the superb graphics and sound which create an intense level of tension, so that when you mistakenly knock into an abandoned shopping trolley and alert a hunter it's really quite terrifying. The combat, just like in GTA, is handled rather less well--but it's not anywhere bad enough to ruin the whole game. Indeed, in gameplay terms the only real fault with Manhunt is a lack of variety, with the game seemingly running out of new ideas well before the end. The true problem then is whether it’s simply too depraved--but that’s a decision you must make for yourself. Definitely not for under-18s. --David Jenkins


Customer Reviews

worthy4
No hanging about, straight into the horror and action. You delve into the world of the sick and twisted. The game only gets sicker and better as you go on. This game has the feel of two rolled into one. First become engulfed in your dark surroundings and the evil personas you must dismember. Then enter the so called real world to silently and joyfuly execute the police and professional killers out for your blood. Only one pig of an acception to this (you will find out). The graphics aren't amazing, but that in no way brings the game down. The setup and game play has a Max Payne feel to it, so the game play is absolutley peng. The stratergy guide (although for PS2) still is worth purchasing as it helps wonders.
Lock the doors, draw the curtains and embrace the dark.
Remember, "it's only a game!"

Brilliant but awfully disturbing............................4
Hmmm, I rented this game for a week and found it played brilliantly. Generally good graphics, only slightly better then PS2 mind you, and hardly any bugs or glitches, and no slow dowm.

MIND YOU, THIS GAME IS NOT FOR THE LIGHT HEARTED.

Knocking someones block off, suffocating someone with a bag, ckoking someone with barbed wire, its good fun but horrible. Too much swearing, and grotesque cutscenes may be exactly someones cup of tea, but I expect many gamers will not enjoy this. The story, missions and voice acting are hulariously bad which is very amusing, and its good to see such a cruel game with some humour.

You are some random guy called Cash, and your aim is simple, DESTROY YOUR ENEMIES BEFORE THEY DO THE SAME THING TO YOU!!
Some brillaint and bog standard weapons such as shotguns, plastic bags, machine guns, meat hooks and cleavers (hard to find) and handguns (plus many more)weapons feature. The AI is generally reasnable, and the enemies are of a mixed variety, thus keeping key elements such as killing, murder, assaination and any other descriptive words being kept fresh.

Generally, this is one of the better horror games for xbox, just be warned!! DO NOT LET YOUR PARENTS SEE THIS!!

Buckets of atmosphere and blood4
Graphically based on the Grand Theft Auto game engine, Manhunt gives you a gritty, extreme videogame equivalent of the Shwarzenegger film 'The Running Man': one man, one night and hordes of sadistic thugs and gangs out to get you.

As the criminal character Cash, saved from deathrow by snuff video director Starweather, the basic idea is for your to use stealth and cunning to evade your attackers and use weapons and household tools that you pick up around the levels to despatch your foes. The main hook (!) with the game is that it features extreme depictions of death and violence. By creeping up behind your victims you have the option to hold down the 'A' key for as long as you dare before detection. The longer you hold it down the more extreme the method of death is enacted. The deaths scenes takes the form of real time (not rendered) 'video clips' with loads of noise and timecode on them, like some underground tape. Definitely not for under 18's.

What elevates Manhunt from what seems like simple gameplay ideas is the way in it is dripping in atmosphere. The soundtrack and effects are stunning, much like the attention lavished on the Grand Theft Auto games. From your beating heartbeat to the thousands of bits of dialogue used by the gangs as they actively search for you in the rundown Carcer City, the game really sucks you in and makes for a real tense experience. Also the Live headset (not necessary, but good if you have one) is used really well as you can make noise or whistle to attract your victims and the voice of your nemesis Starkweather can be heard in your ear, just as your onscreen character would hear him. The AI of the enemies for the most part is really good too and makes you feel that you being actively hunted down.

The only real negatives are that a few of the harder sections rely on trial and error style play, but as the Xbox version loads very quickly this isn't so much of a problem and the opening levels, which act as a kind of tutorial are somewhat dull: you are kind of left feeling 'is this all there is?' but soon the gameplay style opens out and the addition of lethal firearms and characters that you must protect are thrown into the mix as Cash's fight for survival plays out.

If you can see beyond a game that was undoubtedly made to get a strong reaction from it's depiction of violence and quite shallow controls Manhunt offers a really immersive and rewarding gameplay experience. Just don't eat just before playing.