
After spending days upon days playing GRAW and then Rainbow Six: Vegas online, I can safely say that I've found my new addiction. What the 360 version does retain from the PC title is the rock-solid RTS action, balance and gameplay, enjoyable single-player campaign, and intensely satisfying and addicting multiplayer action complete with all the Xbox Live trimmings-which ultimately led me to enjoy this title much more than its PC counterpart.Īs a standalone 360 game, Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars is a strong title made stronger by a fantastic multiplayer mode. To constantly compare the Xbox 360 version to the PC throughout the review would be doing a disservice to the standalone 360 title, so let me get this out of the way: the content is pretty much the same, the graphics are slightly downgraded for the Xbox 360 version, the controller is not a perfect recreation of the mouse and the keyboard, but works well nonetheless, and the multiplayer offers none of the world-building or map customization that PC gamers are used to. Naturally, the first question many would ask is whether or not the 360 title lives up to the assumedly-superior PC version, and this is a question I hate answering. Having first played the PC version and now the 360 version, I know my way around the game.

Over the last couple of months, I've spent a lot of time with Command & Conquer 3: Tiberium Wars.
