The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Hunter the Reckoning Redeemer Xbox Game
PRODUCT DETAILS
UPC:020626718950
Condition:Used
Genre:Action & Adventure
Platform:Microsoft Xbox
Region:NTSC (N. America)
ESRB:Mature
SKU:XBOX_HUNTER_THE_RECKONING_REDEEMER
———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.
Nate –
Game was in great shape as was the book and case. The vendor seemed very careful to ensure the satisfaction of their customers, though i have nothing but positive feedback. One of my favorites games to play with my friends!
ChanelSchultz –
Fun game, but the final battle was disappointing.
Eric Lipski –
This is one of the best games i have ever played. It is sweet you gain levels during the game and get new swords , guns, and edges. Plus get all the cards and unlock cool people like monsters wayward and carpenter. If i didn’ t have this game i would buy it!!!!!!
Tough Customer –
Best of the series though unlike the first, it won’t play on an xbox 360 so only buy if you have an xbox.
Robert Riter –
I know the game is short – that is mentioned many times. You have to ask yourself one thing before buying it: Did you like Diablo’s format? (Do the game, then do it harder with the same character?) If you did, then you’ll actually enjoy this game. I will admit the amount of lives is completely ludicrous in one-player (this isn’t so bad in 4-player, but it doesn’t scale!), but the fact you can import/export your hunter (a major thing not mentioned) is a huge issue.I had wished the X-Box had PC like abilities to get more levels, as that would make this game drastically more replayable. As is, unlocking all the monsters and the two spare hunters (Wayward and Carpenter, which isn’t really a Hunter but appears as one) is completely worthwhile.The most fun you can have with the monsters is saving them to the X-Box memory discs and getting togethor for some 4-way Hunter with friends either A) Packing your badass decked out Hunter and playing ‘Iron Man’ mode <Die, you die!>, which makes the game considerably more interesting, or B) Picking a selection of monsters and playing the game as a troupe of Fomori, BSD, and Sabbat.Which brings me to the two gripes I had – I know this game had a WoD licenese, but apparently ONLY for the Hunter book specifically, as the characters go -out of their way- to avoid actually mentioning WoD terms such as Banes, Fomori, the Wyrm, etc. The closest I could find was one enemy named a Throwback, that was most obvioulsy a Fomori (From White Wo.
Michael J. Tresca –
My wife and I beat the Hunter: The Reckoning -Wayward on the PS2 a year ago, so we decided the next logical step was to buy Hunter: The Reckoning – Redeemer (can that title get any longer?) for the Xbox.The Hunter series is noteworthy because it’s based on a World of Darkness pen-and-paper role-playing game. The World of Darkness was dominated by the first game in the line, vampires. Then werewolves. Then wraiths. Then changelings. Finally, someone got fed up with playing monsters and made a game dedicated to blowing them all up. Thus we have Hunter: The Reckoning, where soccer moms and school teachers suddenly discover they have super powers and can pierce the Veil, the illusion that cloaks the monsters who live among us. Good stuff.Now, you might expect that our heroes would all be rather mundane looking, boring people. But in a sacrifice to the laws of videogames (and thus, the laws of What Teenage Boys Like), all those Hunters were sexed up quite a bit. We have the big scary biker guy (Spencer “Deuce” Wyatt), the black ex-cop (Samantha Alexander), the wise priest guy with a wicked sword (Father Esteban Cortez) and the rich kid raver chick (Kassandra Cheyung). Wayward had something of a 70s funkadelic feel to it.Redeemer adds a new character, and she screams, “Somebody knows their demographic!” Dressed in a tight leather bustier, pigtails, and wielding a huge sword, Kaylie Winter achieves two amazing feats: she can actually swing a sword bigger than her entire bod.
Jen –
I just recently got the original xbox after I traded in my PS2. I have played all the Hunter games and this one is the best by far. The first Hunter the Reckoning was way too hard and the Wayward one for PS2 wasn’t too bad for one player but it got really hard with the 2 player. With Redeemer the thing I liked about it was the fact that you could put it on easy, medium or hard instead of just one setting. You can also level your characters up as well. You can even unlock new characters like a zombie and foot soldiers plus some of the bosses you fight in the game. The graphics are way better as well. If you want to play a hunter game get this one it is worth it and you can find used at a cheap price as well.
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Since the release of “Hunter: The Reckoning,” the games in the series have become steadily more accessible in terms of play balance. “Wayward,” released for the Playstation 2 just months before “Redeemer,” offered a considerable improvement to the hack-slash-shoot formula of its predecessor – but also failed to offer anything that felt genuinely new to veterans of the series. It felt like a glorified expansion pack to the previous game, simply put. “Redeemer,” on the other hand, comes off as a true sequel, and further refines the series’ signature gameplay. Gone is the oppressive difficulty of the original entry, and gone is much of the sameness of “Wayward.”That’s not to say that “Redeemer” doesn’t become repetitive. It does. When a game relies so heavily on hacking, slashing, shooting, and little else, this can tend to occur. Even so, the formula maintains its shallow but addictive quality – particularly if you have a friend to run through the game alongside you (or a few, for the matter of that). There are many noticeable improvements to the core game that include ranged attack power ups (such as incendiary or poisonous bullets), level-ups that actually make an impact on your chosen character (your weapons become noticeably more potent, and your basic ranged weapon can hold more ammunition), NPCs that add a little something extra to the game’s environments, and more health and “edge” enhancers that pop up in place of slain enemies. “Hunter: The Reckoning” was murderously d.
Rockabilly76 –
Pretty fun if it’s with friends and has good replay value.
Dolan –
This isn’t one of the "best" games of all time, but it is certainly one of my top favorites! A twin stick shooter with rpg elements with zombies and werewolves and magic and guns and an evil Santa Clause and killer teddy bear and… damn it’s so cool. It’s an old game by now, and I can’t even get my hands on an original Xbox that will run it anymore, but if you still have a working Xbox and haven’t played this yet, you have to.