and the game came free on my computer so I can not just reinstall it.
YOU NEED SERIAL NUMBER did all of a sudden everyones nanosaur disappear from their computer or are you all using one pirated serial number!!!!!!!!!!Īll of the sudden, my Nanosaur 2 game will not run! It is inexplicable.
Y the hell is this on the top ten? this is the full version. It is quite cool but the gaem only last for 3 levels. But, hey that's what gives it replay ability! D My only tiny gripe is you can't save games until you've completed a level. Especially if you play it with your kids! The controls take a little time to get used to. Thank God there's some lower cost games out there from Pangea and others that are really fun! Anyway, Nanosaur 2 has great music, graphics are breath taking and if you have any love of Sci-Fi this will warm your heart.
Some of the other games that have come with OSs are not so fun.
I'm glad I got this with my Mac OS X install. Then I got my kids involved (Always helps!) and the interest grew and grew. Very fun game from a great game developer! At first I didn't like this game, all I liked was the music. And also, If you're wondering how I got this, I had a go, in a display (NOT E3) In the story mode, there was better graphics, and I also liked playing as a pterodactyl. But, however, I liked the game, with its other modes, such as 2-player racing and story.
Not a full version (That you need to buy a serial number to unlock). Nanosaur 2 Hatchling Full Version (OS X Users)īuy the full game now at. Nanosaur 2 Hatchling Full Version (OS 9 Users) Radeon or GeForce 3D acceleration with at least 32MB VRAM.In addition to the adventure levels, Nanosaur 2 has six 2-player battle games, and it also supports the use of 3D glasses.ĭownload this version if you intend to register the game. This time you pilot a pteradactyl armed with all sorts of hi-tech weaponry. The awful controls are what stick out the most, but there are many more annoyances that make the experience a tad too difficult to swallow on the long run.The long awaited sequel to Nanosaur. When it’s all said and done, Nanosaur 2: Hatchling is not really that bad, but it tries quite hard to make your life unpleasant. A few good ideas ruined by many bad choices Regardless of the choice you make, the annoying controls and the lack of precision can give you a lot of headaches. Hence, you can either play a simple campaign mode and just take it mission-by-mission, or you can choose to have a race with a mate in split screen mode. There are multiple game modes as well, depending on how you want to enjoy the experience. Hostile raptors can be a menace as well, although they can only reach you if you fly too close to the ground. In fact, almost everything can cause you to go down in flames, so you’d better avoid every solid object. The environments are a combination of a jungle and a military complex, but they are a bit too tight to allow you enough room for maneuvers. Besides that, the flying dinosaur also has the ability to use sonic waves to destroy turrets, although they are pretty tough to aim and they also move quite slowly, which make sit difficult to move moving targets. The pterodactyl is equipped with a booster device that allows you to gain significant speed boosts when you need them, or when you want to evade enemy blasts. As such, you get to control a pterodactyl and fly around what appears to be a different dimension, given the fact that you have to watch out for laser turrets and various other technologically-advanced machinery trying to bring you down. Nanosaur 2: Hatchling is not your average game, in the sense that the underlying idea is rather unique and exciting at the same time. Fly a pterodactyl and avoid the obstacles lying ahead However, although it may seem like nothing when you read about it in the history books, it is worth remembering that the dinosaurs ruled the Earth for millions of years, whereas human civilization as we know it only began like a few thousand years ago, at least if we start counting from when people settled down and stopped living like nomads. Dinosaurs went extinct so long ago that humans cannot even properly comprehend those kinds of time periods.