Assassin's Creed 2 vs Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Conviction
Assassin's Creed 2
Assassin's Creed 2 once more putting you in the place of Desmond, this time he moves back in time to his ancestor Ezio Auditore da Firenze in Renaissance Italy. Born to a wealthy family Ezio finds himself thrust into the world of Assassins and Templars.Out for revenge against those who betrayed him and his family Ezio will travel all over Italy in his hunt. Using your stealth skills and amazing Parkour abilities you are off on a beautiful adventure where you find out more of the history and story surrounding Desmond and his ancestors. Climb some of the most famous locations in the country and enjoy the beautiful setting and charm of your main character in a brilliant game full of action and calculation.
This stunning sequel has a lot more fluid gameplay and many more skills and weapons for you to use. Alongside the compelling story you have an amazing game that was the best selling title in 2009.
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Conviction
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Conviction is the first sequel to the Splinter Cell game series. Featuring an epic continuation of the plot, this game puts you once again into the shoes of Sam Fisher, a former secret operative of the NSA's Third Echelon who turned renegade when he find himself betrayed by the very agency he spilled his blood for. In addition to having your colleagues from the Third Echelon hot on your tail, you have to race to foil a devastating terrorist plot that will cost millions of innocent lives.This game has stepped up its game by offering a host of improvements ranging from better and admittedly cooler arsenal to aid you in your mission, a more gripping storyline that will keep you on the edge of your seat, and best of all, the newly added multiplayer function that allows you to play with friends.
However, the game has definitely not aged well and plenty of players have reported problems when trying to run the game on current systems. Not to mention, the game seems to have set aside its stealth-heavy approach and opt for a more instinctive cover-and-shoot system. This is still good and all if the cover system is actually needed to play the game - it's not.
Tom Clancy's Splinter Cell: Conviction may not be what many have expected it to be but it still has one hell of a storyline. Oh and don't forget to make sure the game works on your system before the refund period ends!