Before the Crysis shooter became a determinant of the graphic level of games and the title used to test the components of modern computers, the Crytek studio launched the Far Cry project. He has already squeezed juices from old PC sets, giving many reason to think about reinvesting in new parts. After years, the production, which gave Germany fame, still holds well.
The adventures of brave Jacek Carver, who goes to the colorful archipelago of islands in search of a missing journalist, and finds there something that he would not expect in his life, have spent their sleep with the eyelids of many a computer worker. In addition to fantastic graphics, Far Cry continues to amaze with the artificial intelligence of his opponents, who can even dynamically adapt to the player's actions. It all starts like a holiday in the tropics, but quickly from the sightseeing you move on to an attempt at survival and an explosive crackdown on your opponents, also not entirely human.
Apart from crossing vast stretches of land overgrown with lush vegetation, a lot of time is spent here later also in abandoned bunkers or research complexes. Sometimes the game can also be quite effective in scare. The demo version allows you to play the very beginning of the adventure, offering up to several dozen minutes of gameplay.
It should make a good appetite for more. If the in-game image is too dark and the sliders do not want to work, switch Special Effects Quality to Low in the advanced graphics settings. In case of disappearing textures, strange fog and blue world it helps to change r_Driver variable in systemcfg.lua file to OpenGL (instead of Direct3D9).








