Top cast Edit. Dre Grizz as Grizz voice. Dwayne Adway K-dog as K-dog voice. Chad L. Coleman Booker as Booker voice as Chad Coleman. John DiMaggio. Nika Futterman. Nick Jameson Frank as Frank voice. Dominique Jennings Alexa as Alexa voice. Andre Emerson.
More like this. Storyline Edit. Welcome to the hood: a hard place to live, but an easy place to die You are Cent, the hardest street hustler in NY who gets an urgent page from an old cell mate K-Dog, however 50 walks into an ambush where he is shot 9 times and left for dead.
Back on his feet and seeking revenge, 50 gets caught in a web of corruption, double-crosses and shady deals that lead him on a bloody path through New York's crime underworld. Working with G-Unit soldiers - Lloyd Banks, Young Buck and Tony Yayo, the streets heat up as 50 takes on the most dangerous crime organizations in the city, uncovering an international conspiracy with devastating implications.
The streets are watching as 50 blasts his way to the truth. Did you know Edit. Trivia The game is featured in Inside man Quotes 50 Cent : I want to see K-Dog. User reviews 8 Review. Top review. Appalling in every way! This is pretty much the worst and most over-hyped game of and made a lot of 'bottom 10' lists in many magazines last month. And it bloody deserves it. The problems with this game begin before you even lift it off the shelf in the store.
I mean take a look at the cover. It's 50 Cent, one of the few African American 'role models' around these days, in a defencive pose with a stereotypical 'angry black guy' look on his face oh, please don't hurt me Mr. Now I am not a fuddy-duddy conservative who blames people like Marilyn Manson for corrupting kids or whatever because I know kids are more intelligent than adults give them credit for.
But America is a very racist country and when 50 Cent misrepresents the Black Community and backs up the xenophobic myth that all Black people are evil or killers or gang-bangers in some way I can't help but get very annoyed. Second of all is the fact that this drivel game is no more than a laughable male fantasy.
Yes, I know Mr. Cent has been shot 9 times but it was all at once with low calibre bullets. It's not as if he goes out and gets shot at every day and is immune to all lead fired in the direction of his person.
But when violence and death have haunted you your whole life the LAST thing you should do is capitalise on a game that glorifies gun-play and gang warfare. That's just disgusting and perverse and if Mr. Cent truly 'kept it real' what a ridiculous, meaningless phrase he would treat his demons with respect. Enter the game, and you will find that the visuals of an urban jungle are excellent, giving the feel of an urgent chase throw the forgotten alleys of New York City.
However, 50 Cent: Bulletproof is all style over substance. Shooting mechanics are not refined, and level design is elementary. The only thing you'll do is run through the alleyways shooting with very frustrating control schematics, shooting brainless legions of enemies.
The narrative holds up enough to make it worth finishing the level. However, gameplay becomes a drag pretty quickly. Every aspect becomes the same, and it isn't much you can do to make the game intriguing. What you can say in 50 Cent: Bulletproof's favor, though, is fans of the artist will undoubtedly enjoy the game.
If you buy into 50 Cent's brand, there are plenty of unlockables, including tracks, videos, and more, to make the grind worth it. But if you're not a fan or have little interest in the person, you may not get the thrills expected from an action game.
So, as you can conclude, 50 Cent: Bulletproof is made for fans who can't get enough of the artist. Naturally, persons interested in a brand will slog out poor gameplay to get to the good stuff - new music. From a general perspective, 50 Cent: Bulletproof is a pretty poor game - but definitely not the worst action game.
It sort of feels like a limited version of Syphon Filter without the stealth and the diverse mechanics. We can pinpoint our critical analysis of the meme that circulated the internet, 'Fofty, Please, No More. Nope, it won't. How much street cred can nine bullet wounds buy? Can you star in a game in which you gruesomely stab people, steal their wallets, and then use their money to buy an assortment of promo merchandise? You bet. Bulletproof, a third-person shooter in the vein of Dead to Rights or Max Payne , was part of 's 50 Cent holiday marketing assault, and like all advertising it favors image over substance.
The cut-scenes are top-notch, with dark, druggy art direction and great voice acting from 50, Eminem, and Dr. But as a game, Bulletproof is a disaster.
Your G-Unit allies are so dumb they had to be made invincible to keep them alive. Your enemies, on the other hand, sense your presence from yards away and run in erratic patterns as they spray bullets, a frustration compounded by sloppy aiming controls.
Bulletproof is a blur of lazy design, pandering gore, and shameless product placement. Once you get past the fantastic character models and the mountains of licensed music found within though the same four tracks play over and over again during the game , you have nothing but problems.
Like every star-studded, fran-chised-to-hell game that plops on the PS2, Bulletproof looks like a million bucks and plays like, well, 50 cents.
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