Crysis 3 Can You Hear Me Now

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Cookie Grosky

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Aug 4, 2024, 11:03:26 PM8/4/24
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Thelast patch ( received last Friday -- ) brought a bug in the Italian version. voices in movies are not heard (only music and sound effects).

If I go to set up the game in English, everything works fine.

Ea games doesn't want to solve the problem. Ideas?


I've tried to use my silencer, but the enemy hears it, and I tried to melee, but the North Korean doesn't go down at first strike, and I have to hit him a couple of times, and then his buddies hear it.


I hated Splinter Cell because it seemed so much easier to shoot the guy and move one, but common sense had to be re-engineered to match the gameplay. It looks like the same thing is happening in Crysis.


in Crysis, if you equip the tactical attachment to your gun, you can change ammo types until you get to it...it fires a tranquiliser dart. It's entirely silent and doesn't actually kill the target, so you can even take the non-lethal approach :)


After years of having a rubbish PC that couldn't run anything made after 2004, I finally saved up enough money to upgrade. The centrepiece of the build was a GTX 460, which I plugged into my motherboard with giddy excitement. In minutes I would be playing proper new games at a blazing frame-rate. And, of course, I chose Crysis as the game to test the new build, as was the custom in those days. If your PC could run Crysis at an agreeable frame-rate, it was probably pretty decent.


I power the PC up. Windows starts. Everything is stable. Then I turn off the lights, fire up Crysis, and prepare to shoot people in a dazzlingly realistic jungle. I go through the opening section where your squad jumps out of the plane. The frame rate is solid. I'm delighted. Dreams can come true. But then I hear a bang, see a flash of blue light, and my monitor goes black. Black as a moonless prairie night. My heart is thumping and a wave of fear crashes over me. Did Crysis just kill my brand new PC?


So Crysis did kill my PC, but it was largely my fault. Okay, all my fault. The GPU was too powerful for the PSU. The PSU was too cheap and shitty. And Crysis was just too damn demanding. I was certain the explosion would have fried my motherboard and RAM, which I read can happen, but when I got a new PSU later that week I was relieved to discover everything was working fine. But I could have easily ruined my system and been without a PC for another few months. And that would've been unbearable.


That night scarred me. Whenever I play Crysis now, I get a twinge of dread when I go through that opening section. Even though my current PC can handle Crysis without breaking a figurative sweat, I keep expecting to hear that bang, see that flash. But this experience taught me a hard lesson. Don't cut corners with your PSU. Buy one made by a reliable, trusted brand. And if you're buying a new part for your PC, make sure it can handle the voltage. These are mistakes I'll never make again.


One thing i have noticed is that you need to fully cloak before moving from cover, i was running out of cover as i hit the cloak button and was always getting shot at, now i wait for the voice to say "Cloak Engaged," before moving


I found my cloak didn't work at all if my detection meter was red, but figured that was the way it was supposed to work. If I let the meter go down even slightly into the yellow it was more effective. A bigger problem I have with the system is the detection meter instantly maxing out. I could be in dense jungle, crouched, I can't see or hear any enemies whatsoever (even with binoculars) and I get instant red.


I've experienced with the same things as well. Though I have figured out that enemies will still see you "cloaked" if your shadow appears if front of their eyes. After all, you can't completely be invisible. Another would be making fast movements,speed mode (which creates loud noises) is also the factor for causing attention.


Yup, same with me. I can be prone on the ground a mile away while a enemy has his back turned, fully cloaked, and my meter will still go red and they start shooting me. It had no problems in the beginning of the game, but right after I disabled the GPS jammer, I can no longer use cloak. I've tried dying on purpose, resetting checkpoint and restarting the level. Nothing. Still can't use it.


The module allows the player to hear a beeping sound whenever an enemy is nearby. It can be helpful when there are enemies around the corner or cloaked, as this will reveal their position without leaving the player vulnerable. In singleplayer, the module is located on the Index Finger (Visor Modules) in the Module section and is unlocked for 1200 Nano Catalyst.


Crysis does not limit the imagination of its players, and this flexibility adds tremendous replayability to the campaign. It does get more linear as things go on, but the shooting mechanics are strong and it has no problem delivering excellent setpieces. When one factors in how good it still looks, Crysis has aged shockingly well for a first-person shooter, and anyone into the genre who has never had a beefcake PC capable of running it properly would do well to check it out on next-gen consoles.


Parents: According to the ESRB, this game is rated M and features Blood, Strong Language, and Violence. All three of these games are in fact M-rated shooters with a fair bit of blood, mangled corpses, and military men swearing a lot. Nothing really rises above that, but parents with kids experiencing COVID-related trauma from the current pandemic may find Crysis 2 in particular to be unsuitable.


Deaf & Hard of Hearing Gamers: The game features voiced cutscenes, and the dialogue is presented in white font. The text is not resizable. All dialogue and instructions are provided in text, and there are no necessary audio cues. With that said, for those who want to play stealthy, being able to hear enemies in the environments is key to success, so that could bring up issues for some players.


Our God is too real, and too big, and too glorious to work according to our human expectations and convenient timetables. He loves us too much to regularly do just what we want when we want in our times of crisis. But he always sees us. He always hears us. And in Christ, he will answer, not necessarily when and how we want, but with the answer we need, painful as it may be for now, for our ultimate good and glory.


From what I hear,

it seems that it was male voice,pitched down,doubled to create stereo effect(maybe Waves Doubler), it was EQued in mid range to make some kind of phone effect,also I think it was processed by plugin like Waves Metalizer or something similar,maybe there was added just a touch of phaser,chorus or flanger.


Once I set up the Crystalizer and bumped up to 24 bit depth, I was ready to start experimenting. I started by using the supplied Creative headphones while listening to some music. I have a wide array of music in my collection, from rock to rap and virtually everything in between.


You really can't appreciate a high-end sound card with lower quality headphones, and that is exactly what the supplied headphones are. Granted, they would be fine for basic audio listening but if you are spending the money for improving your laptop's audio, it only makes sense to use a quality pair of headphones or an external speaker system.


After making the switch, things sounded much better and I couldn't tell any difference between the Go! and the X-Fi card in my desktop system. And speaking of switch, any time you make a new connection with the headphone jack on the Go!, the above dialog box pops up, allowing you to select between 2/2.1 speakers or headphones as your listening device.


Movie testing was next, as I watched clips from several different action movies including Independence Day and Stargate using the Logitech headphones. This was my first opportunity to put the X-Fi CMSS-3D to the test and the results were a bit lackluster. I toggled the X-Fi CMSS-3D on and off repeatedly and, while I could tell a difference in the sound output, I never really got the feeling of surround sound when watching action sequences. Rather, things sounded a little more "alive" but no true sense of surround sound was audible for me.


I put the X-Fi Go! through its final test with some gaming using Crysis and Unreal Tournament 3. The 6150 graphics card in my notebook is not powerful enough to run either of these games, even at the lowest graphical settings. For actual game testing, I had to install the X-Fi Go! on my desktop system which is much more powerful with an Intel Q9650 quad core processor and the works.


Gaming is where the X-Fi CMSS-3D really made an impression on me, especially in UT3. I could clearly hear projectiles as they whizzed by me on either side. The effect was also there in Crysis as I could hear enemy movement in wooded areas where otherwise I might not have spotted them as quickly.


The U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan has precipitated ahumanitarian crisis. Hear the latest on the global human rights response to therapidly unfolding situation and about deteriorating conditions insideAfghanistan for women. And find out how the United States is handling thearrival of tens of thousands of people from Afghanistan.




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