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Binary Domain – Xbox 360 Game

Original price was: $63.00.Current price is: $34.97.

-44%
(96 customer reviews)

Available on backorder

only 6 left in stock

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  • 121 Day Warranty Period
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Available on backorder

only 6 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Binary Domain Xbox 360 Game


PRODUCT DETAILS
UPC:010086680546
Condition:Used
Platform:Microsoft Xbox 360
ESRB:Everyone
SKU:X360_BINARY_DOMAIN

———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.

Additional information

Weight 8 lbs
Product Type

Platform

Xbox 360

ESRB Rating

Teen

Genre

Shooter

Players

1-4

Condition

Used

96 reviews for Binary Domain – Xbox 360 Game

  1. ALAN A

    This game has quite a good rating so I decided to pick it up and try, it’s more to a machine age with immersive and atmospheric squad-based shooter, thrilling encounters with these highly intelligent robotic enemies require you to think tactically, make challenging, real-time moral decisions and build up trust with your team mates in order to guide your squad to safety and success, if you like third-person squad-based shooting game blasting and killing robots than this game is for you.

  2. new Tron

    Binary Domain is one of those games that you can’t help but love despite it’s glaring flaws. It’s obvious that the game was a labor of love by some very skilled developers, and it’s ambition and scope is quite admirable. It’s a very fun game with a few glaring flaws, but none of this is enough to drag down what is a very enjoyable game that lingers long after you play it.Binary Domain’s major flaw is it’s conversation/trust system. Being a third person, squad-based shooter, you lead a team of mercenaries with different combat specialties that can be constantly rotated in and out of your squad. The game incorporates a conversation system, where if you answer questions asked by your squad mates in a fashion that is favorable to them, their trust in you increases. On the contrary, if they don’t like what you have to say, their trust will decrease. It’s a very simplistic, almost forced mechanic that just feels amateurish and out of place. Even worse, is that you have the option to actually answer via voice through a microphone, but the speech recognition in the game is so broken, that it’s just easier to use the conversation wheel. The trust levels supposedly affect how much your squad listens to you and obeys the tactical orders you issue while in battle, but again, this system is broken as well. They rarely do what you order them to do, which renders the entire dialogue and tactical orders systems irrelevant anyways. This whole concept should have been scrapped, because it just.

  3. Magus

    Binary Domain takes place in the future where robots live among humans. They take over jobs from people like maintenance, policing, food servicing, etc. Things go wrong when a man breaks into a building. He seeks help with something wrong with him, so he goes after a robotics specialist in the building. Before he can be arrested, he reveals shockingly he’s a robot that had no idea he was one before. The suspected manufacturer of this new type of robotic human is Amada Mifune from Japan. Your main character Dan and Bo from America are trained to terminate robots, who in this game they refer to as, “scrap heads”. These robot disguised as humans are called, “hollow children”. You meet up a few other charactes from different countries in the same field to team up and arrest Amada.Robots will be your enemy in this game. This is where it’s interesting because the robots just keep going after you. You can shoot them to pieces, but they will go after you still. Their arms, legs, and other parts shot up to pieces barely slow them down. You must make sure they are blow up to finish them. It’s similar to the sci-fi shooter game Dead Space. The bosses are huge. They require hitting certain spots on the boss robots to take them down. The first giant boss for instance, is a giant spider. You can shoot the bottom lighted area under the body or you can focus on the legs to slow it down. If you shoot all of them off, it can’t do too much at that point. It’s really neat how you can go about di.

  4. Supericedog

    The demo was very fun, so I couldn’t wait to play the whole game. The game blew me away. The graphics were on point but, I wish the game was a lot longer. It sucks that this game didn’t get any advertising because a lot of people would be missing out on a fun adventure.

  5. Guelmis Edwards

    It was new in package as it description

  6. koolaide

    I went into this game not expecting much from it and found myself totally surprised. I really enjoyed this title and it is a shame that it didn’t make enough money to gain a sequel (if it gets one I would pick it up no questions asked). The gameplay is fluid, the soundtrack is exciting, and sure the voice acting was cheesy, but that was kind of the point. This game doesn’t take itself serious and that is a plus.My only complaint is that there is not new game plus mode. You know where you get to continue with your character’s levels and stuff from the end of your first play through.

  7. Steven Sword

    I don’t usually write reviews for the games I buy(mostly because I’m bad at it), but this one didn’t sell very well(NPD 22,000) and I find that to be unacceptable. I’ll keep this short and to the point.It was created by Toshihiro Nagoshi, who created the Yakuza franchise.The Characters are really likeable and I found myself actually caring about a few of them. Especially once it was discovered that certain story story decisions can get people killed, permanently. There is a trust meter for each character. Based on the decisions you make, each member of your team will form an opinion of you. This effects their performance in combat and how they act toward you. They will risk their lives to save you when things get harry or they may even refuse orders if they don’t like you.The story is well written and the world created for it is absolutely beautiful. Their are multiple story arcs and endings depending on decisions made.The combat is very polished. This is the first tactical-third-person-shooter I’ve played where the controls actually work as intended. For example, no accidentally diving in and out of cover when you run past something. Then there is the point-specific damage on the robots. This is a really fun mechanic: legs blown off and they start crawling toward you, arm blown off and they can’t hold guns in that arm(really useful against those carrying shields), head blown off and they get confused and start killing other robots.Also there is an XP system for obtaining bot.

  8. Terry get messner

    The game is great

  9. Brian Cheek

    Binary Domain is AMAZING. I could start this review just by saying that and I still wouldn’t be giving it justice. It is at it’s core a cover based linear shooter. Been there done that. However it incorporates robots and voice prompts. There is nothing quite as satisfying as picking apart a robot and watching it’s cybernetic body part fly off before it explodes while trying to craw to you. It’s amazing. I love the story also. The dialog is well written and often times hilarious. The stereotypes play off each other very well and serve their purposes. Everything is tight and well constructed. Graphics are amazing. If your on the fence. Fear not this is easily worth the price of admission.

  10. Juan Garcia

    The game itself tries some very ambitious things when it comes to gameplay, it incorporates a system of consequence that directly impacts gaming strategy. Do you use your squad as a support for your cover to cover, point position, gunfire brawls with futuristic robot soldier waves that run from lightly armored to heavily armed soldier robots that with close enough distance will ram you to the floor leaving you open for easy target practice by the scrap heads? Or do you play it safe and move from enemy kill to enemy kill in carefully placed assaults from you, while you have one of your squad members use her sniper to pick off additional shots on soldiers to far for your rifle bursts to be effective? I fell in love with this game’s campaign, and its deeply intriguing story that at times will have you laugh, other times you’ll have your attention fully captured on what someone will say next. The game itself has characters that you grow to “trust” and likewise if you show your up to the challenge of combating your opposition, they’ll trust you. Together you form a squad that relies on eachother, at times I misjudged a cover angle and found myself stuck between a checkpoint restart, and the amazing boss battle at the end of one of the levels, when I got myself stuck with some very difficult combat. This game is the type that if you’ve played uncharted, lost planet, and red dead redemption, you’ll feel like a pro and want to take on the entire robot population up in arms just to pr.

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