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The Saboteur (Xbox 360)

by Electronic Arts
Xbox 360  Unknown
3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)
In stock.
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  • Live the resistance in an open-world Paris – Fight and sabotage your way through a stylized open-world 1940s Paris – from the top of the Eiffel Tower, to the riverbanks of the Seine, the cathedral of Notre Dame or the prestigious Champs-Élysées
  • Be the Saboteur – Use a broad range of weapons and explosives to perform your blockbuster sabotage as you single-handedly hunt-down your enemies to dismantle and destroy the Nazi occupation
  • Quiet In, Loud Out – Use gameplay systems like Climbing, Sneaking, and Stealth Kills to infiltrate the Nazi occupation to perform acts of Sabotage Once you've blown your target to pieces, leverage the intuitive cover system and assortment of weapons to blast your way to freedom
  • Vertical World – This version of Paris was designed to leverage the unique abilities of The Saboteur. Being a Saboteur is all about surprise attacks and Paris' rooftops are the perfect path for your secret operations
  • Will to Fight – The Saboteur introduces a innovative new feature that is both an iconic visual style, and a compelling gameplay element. See and feel Paris change around you as you progress through the game. Go from a dark and oppressed black and white policed state, to a bright and inspired world where the citizens fight back
  • Hijack any vehicle - From high performance race cars to military vehicles, as the Saboteur, you can drive any vehicle that comes along to escape your pursuers.
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Game Information

  • Platform:   Xbox 360
  • BBFC Rating: Suitable for 15 years and over Suitable for 15 years and over. Not for sale to persons under age 15. By placing an order for this product, you declare that you are 15 years of age or over.
  • Media: Video Game

Product details

  • Delivery Destinations: Visit the Delivery Destinations Help page to see where this item can be delivered.
  • ASIN: B002GYVYWQ
  • Item Weight: 113 g
  • Release Date: 4 Dec 2009
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,803 in PC & Video Games (See Top 100 in PC & Video Games)

Product Description

Manufacturer's Description

There have plenty of World War II games over the years, but none with the intrigue and danger of The Saboteur. As Irishman Sean Devlin you must fight back against the Nazi occupation of Paris, working with British Intelligence and the French Resistance to pave the way for D-Day.

Inspire Parisians to fight by taking out key Nazi targets
Liberate Paris and watch the game world turn to colour
Use stealth and strike from cover to take down targets
Use your athletic skills to get the drop on German agents

Explore an open world recreation of wartime Paris and fight to free the city, with newly liberated districts turning from black and white to colour as the strength of the occupying forces weakens. Only by inspiring the civilians' will to fight can you begin to turn the tide, as you assassinate German officials and sabotage equipment, vehicles and buildings.

The closer you get to final victory the more help you'll have, but for many missions you must rely on your own stealth tactics and combat skills. As you clamber across rooftops and make use of the intuitive cover system, you can help win WWII from a very different perspective.

Key Features
  • Resistance is not futile: Stealth, action and '40s chic combine in a unique take on World War II warfare that's inspired by true events and people.
  • Colour of victory: Watch liberated districts burst into colour, as you fight to free a city where Nazi symbols are the only things not in black and white.
  • Assassin's creed: Use your stealth skills to assassinate the Nazis responsible for killing your friends, as you race across rooftops and use cover to strike without being seen.
  • Weapons of war: Collect and utilise a wide range of weapons and explosives to help your missions or commandeer enemy vehicles to complete your goals.
  • Power to the people: Inspire the people with your victories and you can count on help from the Maquis, ordinary civilians and British Intelligence.

    World War II games aren’t exactly thin on the ground, but there has never been one remotely like The Saboteur. Instead of sticking you on the front lines, it immerses you in an edgy, paranoid Paris, occupied by the Nazis, in which the Resistance is struggling to remain below the radar yet strike back at the oppressors. Take this delicious scenario and add Grand Theft Auto-style third-person, free-roaming action-adventure gameplay, then season it with some exceedingly clever visuals -- areas locked down by the Nazis are rendered in near-monochrome, with just the odd splash of colour – and you have a tasty dish indeed.

    Vibrant colours abound, mind you, as proceedings kick off: the war hasn’t yet started, and you find yourself playing Sean Devlin, a devil-may-care Irishman who is a race-car mechanic and budding driver. A race on the eve of the war brings you into contact with your nemesis, high-ranking Nazi Kurt Dierker, who murders your best mate Jules; as war erupts, you rescue Jules’ sister Veronique and your mentor Vittore, pitching up in Paris at a house of ill-repute called the Belle de Nuit.

    Which is where the fun really starts. A now cynical, hard-bitten Devlin, seeking to avenge Jules and look after the impulsive Veronique, falls in with the French Resistance and, through British old flame Skylar Sinclair British Intelligence, and carries out increasingly risky missions for both organisations, as well as other wings of the Resistance, priests and all sorts of others. The Saboteur is a meaty game with vast numbers of missions and side-missions; those involving the Resistance and British Intelligence advance the story, though.

    Open-world action-adventure games are all about systems which determine how the world operates and in that respect, The Saboteur is state-of-the-art. The key system is Suspicion – the Nazis occupying Paris were famously paranoid, and if any of them spot you doing anything untoward, they will blow whistles to sound the alarm. At which point you will be swamped by the blighters.

    It’s lucky, then, that Devlin has stealth abilities – when he bloodlessly executes Nazis, he can don their uniforms and creep around. And he can scale buildings, and thus approach unexpectedly from the rooftops. Escaping from suspicion involves distancing yourself from pursuers or finding a hiding-place. The weaponry is pleasingly exotic, including scoped sniper-rifles and RPGs; ammo is plentiful. A Contraband system acts as currency, which you can exchange for useful items with spivvy black marketers (who also assign you side-missions). The cars are great, too, and you get free access to any you’ve stolen once you have driven them back to one of many secure garages dotted around the city. A period soundtrack ratchets up the pungent atmosphere.

    The aspect of The Saboteur which really stands out, though, is its missions: they ramp up before long to a truly spectacular level, and take in all manner of exotic locations, such as a Zeppelin or the Louvre. Impressively, you never feel that you have to take a specific approach although, in general, stealth is best employed unless there are only a few enemies in the vicinity. The story and characters impress, too, with more depth than we are used to finding in games – Skylar flirts incorrigibly with Devlin, for example, and Margot de Bonnaire, leader of one of the Resistance factions, is obsessed with wrestling Parisian artworks from the grip of the Nazis.

About the Developer: Pandemic Studios
After merging with BioWare and then being bought by EA, Pandemic became one of the biggest studios in the U.S. They've worked on many different styles of games, from Star Wars: Battlefront to Mercenaries, but they were closed in 2009 - although the name and some staff remain at EA. If the idea of enacting a GTA-style game in a stylised yet utterly believable Occupied Paris appeals to you (and how could it not?), then you’re going to love The Saboteur.

Product Description

Pandemic Studios invites you to experience the ultimate open-world action/adventure—as The Saboteur. Fight, climb, and race your way through a uniquely stylized version of Nazi-occupied France, and hunt down your sworn enemies who have taken everything from you. Enter the seedy underground world of a saboteur living in 1940s Paris, where the women are sexy, the missions are epic, and the revenge is satisfying.

Play as Sean Devlin, a street-tough Irish racing mechanic seeking personal redemption in the first open-world action game set in Nazi-occupied Europe. Now, it’s time for payback—with the help of the French Resistance, British intelligence, an arsenal of weaponry, and your own street smarts and brawn, you must exact revenge on those who aimed to destroy your life. Motivated by retribution and armed with tactics of sabotage, blow up zeppelins, derail trains, implode bridges, destroy armoured tanks, and level enemy facilities in the name of vengeance.

 

  • Live the resistance in an open-world Paris – Fight and sabotage your way through a stylized open-world 1940s Paris – from the top of the Eiffel Tower, to the riverbanks of the Seine, the cathedral of Notre Dame or the prestigious Champs-Élysées
  • Be the Saboteur – Use a broad range of weapons and explosives to perform your blockbuster sabotage as you single-handedly hunt-down your enemies to dismantle and destroy the Nazi occupation
  • Quiet In, Loud Out – Use gameplay systems like Climbing, Sneaking, and Stealth Kills to infiltrate the Nazi occupation to perform acts of Sabotage Once you've blown your target to pieces, leverage the intuitive cover system and assortment of weapons to blast your way to freedom
  • Vertical World – This version of Paris was designed to lever

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
66 of 69 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Great Game, so why the bad press? 26 Dec 2009
Fun: 5.0 out of 5 stars   
I am not a Pandemic fanboy, I loved the first Mercenaries game, but found the second unplayable. Ditto with Star Wars Battleground (and don't get me started on LOTR Conquest!).

So, before buying The Saboteur I waited till all the critics were listed on Metacritic. Having seen the game get a lowly 7.2 and lots of warnings about `broken' game play and glitchy graphics I passed by on the other side. However, after playing everything decent game for the X360 I decided to rent TS.... and oh boy am I glad I did!........ Dear reader after playing the game for 6 hours I bought a copy!

Quick review and rebuttals:

Game mechanisms. Nothing wrong with the driving - this is an area I usually struggle with, but I find I have no trouble with the vehicles found around the streets of Paris. The stealth elements are also fine and problem free - wether its going over the roof tops or by using a dead soldier's uniform as a disguise. The latter has come in for some criticism as `broken.' Not proven in my opinion - you just have to be very careful how near you get to enemies and what you get up to while being `watched.' Climbing has been bashed by the critics. This too is fine. Sure Sean Devlin is no Altar, but he is a whiskey loving, womanizing, chain smoking Irishman not an elegant renaissance assassin. And after he scales a building and reaches the rooftop playground he is much more fun and easy to use than his ancient counterpart. Shooting and brawling are great to.... Sure there is no `lock-on' but I have always thought that was a little bit like hand holding in other titles. So I don't miss it a all. Graphic aren't cutting edge, they more detailed than Saint's Row 2, but not as eye bleeding as GTA 4.... and there are `jaggies' which I hate - hence the loss of one star from my score. Many critics have reported graphical `glitches on glitches' and `bugs on bugs.' With sandbox titles I always install them to my 360's hard-drive which usually minimizes such issues. And so in 12 hours of game play I have only spotted a couple of minor (not game breaking in any way) errors - a piece of the nose cone of a V2 I destroyed got stuck in the sky for a few seconds and one character ran backwards into a cut scene. The music is limited (only a handful of tracks), but right for the WW 2 French setting, I would have liked more....

Reasons to be cheerful.

The setting is terrific. The action is intense (yes that includes the stealthy in disguise moments - some of which actually made my pulse race). It a great, fun, true sandbox game! And that it doesn't spoon feed or hand hold the player all the time is a plus for me. There are, for instance, moral dilemmas , that, as far as i know do not effect the game, the players standing, or get any achievements. They are not even drawn attention to....... An example is that while traveling through Paris you will see the civilian population being mistreated or even about to be executed by the enemy. Do you ignore their plight and leave them to die, etc or do you rescue them - which usually results in the player being chased by enemy soldiers and so delaying whatever it was you were going to do in the first place? Also, the `free play' destroy anything that belongs to the enemy element, has given me some of the best moments I can member in gaming (better than many missions in other sand box games). For example, there is a coastal installation consisting of V2s (both above and underground) an AA gun, a tank, a train and lots of enemy soldiers. This took me quite a while to crack and could have been tackled in many different ways. Also, there is the problem of how to get into `closed zones' that Devlin doest have the correct `papers' for (no GTA lover no waiting for them to be opened for you here!).

So why did a great game like this do so poorly with the critics when a piece of over hyped tat like Halo ODST got rave reviews (I was sucked in by them.....)? Well its fashionable to say WW2 games are passe, and that EA aren't particularly hip, and only the GTA franchise can legitimately use the sandbox genre..... Also, it may be that some critics are paid up members of the P[olitically] C[orrect] brigade, and do not like a game whose main character is a hard drinking, chain smoking. brawling, womanizer (based on me then!) whose secret hide-our is at the back of an adults only night club! But for those of us that do like WW 2 games, don't need spoon feeding and like our playable characters more Gene Hunt than Gene Autry this game is fabulous!
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Sabotage your social life for a weekend or two 25 Jan 2010
Fun: 5.0 out of 5 stars   
I purchased this game to simply give me something to do during the Christmas period, at that time I just couldn't see anything else out there that appealed and The Saboteur appeared to be the best of bad bunch.

I was also acutely aware that The Saboteur was made by Pandemic, the same developers as Mercenaries 2, a game that I initially liked but gave up on about one third through as I would end up spending hours, after an unexpected death, just retracing my steps across the large map to get back to the location of a half completed mission, generally when I die I like to be put back relatively close to the action not all the way back to HQ. However it was pretty obvious after an hour or so of play that The Saboteur was going to be a far more enjoyable experience.

The main missions follow a very linear path through the very large map and with dedication it will take the average gamer 10-12 hours to complete but at any time you have the option go off-piste and take on the 700 or so other targets on the map, these "side missions" will earn you contraband credits that you can then use to purchase more powerful weapons, area maps and all the ammunition you need to liberate Paris and the surrounding area. To complete all side mission I estimate about another 20 hours but as I am still picking them off it is quite hard to judge, they are also reasonably variable in length and difficulty, ranging from blowing up a remote observation tower with one guard to clearing V2 launch sites with lot's of protection.

Much has been made about the climbing in this game which is probably inevitable given that it was released very close to Assassins Creed 2 however all it does here give you a bigger area to play with, it is easy to do so it is nothing special but in no way intrusive either. Having said that, as I climbed the Eifel tower I did get that nasty tingle just below my stomach that other vertigo sufferers will recognise.

There is also a lot in this game for the more obsessive gamer who likes to collect everything, all vehicles can be stolen and added to your personal collection and there are postcards and Paris views to be picked up.

There have been some complaints on the driving element, required for races and to evade the Army and SS when you have been a bit naughty but I found the controls easy to master and while one or two of the car chases went on a bit there were none that made me give up.

So final summary
Gameplay: as linear or sandbox as you want, varied missions that can be carried out using stealth or brute force, the choice is yours. Much improved save mechanic over other Pandemic releases, should also keep you busy for a while
Voice acting: Delightfully hammed up with some gags that work and some that don't but this is a game not a documentary or movie.
Story: You get to blow lots up, protect the good guys and kill the bad guys what more do you want.
Soundtrack: Very good but could do with a few more songs, the limited number included are superb.
Graphics: Good enough and I like the way colour returns after you liberate a section, gives a nice sense of achievement

All in all this is one that worked for me
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Brill 10 Jan 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase
Fun: 4.0 out of 5 stars   
Brought this for my husband for christmas and have been sat wearing my tin hat every day. He really enjoys playing it.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars Viva la Revolution
Set in open world environment instantly making this game a must to play for me. The character Sean, is a funny guy who often slags of the Nazi Germans in play which is amusing. Read more
Published 5 days ago by Miss Terry Frances Frame
5.0 out of 5 stars THE SABOTEUR
THIS IS A GOOD GAME ALTHOUGH A LITTLE OLD AND THERE IS NO SUPPORT FOR IT, BUT APART FROM THAT GIVE IT A GO AND SEE WHAT U THINK.
Published 8 months ago by gary giff
5.0 out of 5 stars Saboteur de force
This game appealed to me in a lot of ways.

It is set during the second world war and has many elements similiar to a GTA game. Read more
Published 13 months ago by BALLYSEAGAL
4.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant Artistic Gameplay
I thought this game was amazing! I love the black and white And how it changes when you liberate areas. Read more
Published 14 months ago by GentlemanWizard
2.0 out of 5 stars Not for me
It was a fair price for the game however it didnt work on my xbox. I would only buy new from now on. Item was promt and reasonable priced. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Travis
5.0 out of 5 stars a great variation on a theme
Ok, so you've heard that it's Assassin's Creed set in War torn 1940's Paris. Which is exactly what it is, but executed extremely well. It is sexy, sassy and a whole lot of fun. Read more
Published 15 months ago by Mr. A. Guy
5.0 out of 5 stars Must buy!!
What a super game. Bought this for my son who loves it. Great to succeed in the missions as you proceed through the game turning your surrounds from b/w to colour as you win. Read more
Published 18 months ago by Wend
3.0 out of 5 stars saboteur
Could be a good game but lot of time wasted with story lines and loading. Graphics not to bad but could be better.
Published 19 months ago by eddiewalsh
5.0 out of 5 stars Love it, love it, love it
Being new to the whole gaming scene, the idea of shooting up Nazi's really appealed to me so this was one of the first games I bought. Read more
Published 21 months ago by Sean Devlin
4.0 out of 5 stars Imagine an old style GTA....based around 1940!
Basically the game is based in or around Paris during the Nazi occupation, you play as an Irishman who wants to seek revenge for someone who was killed by a German officer... Read more
Published 21 months ago by MrE
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