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Optical media scratches. It’s also susceptible to various degradations if not handled and stored correctlyCDs Are Not Forever: The Truth About CD/DVD Longevity, 'Mold' & 'Rot'CDs Are Not Forever: The Truth About CD/DVD Longevity, 'Mold' & 'Rot'The digital age has revolutionized the way we handle information. Never before could humankind record and store so much information and in such diversity. While the amount of data has increased exponentially, the predicted life...Read More. And because games on CD and DVD usually come in boxes with some nice extras, it’s useful for long-term value (monetary and usefulness) if the discs are used sparingly.
Search for and download any torrent from the pirate bay using search query vietcong. Direct download via magnet link. Search Torrents. 1: 0: Games Vietcong v1.60: Fist Alpha No-CD Crack, Simply Download & Play. Uploaded, Size 2.74 GiB, ULed by dauphong: 1: 0: Games Black Hawk Down - Vietcong. Uploaded, Size 3.57. Click Here To Download Vietcong 2 Game. File Size: 2.72 GB. Previous: Need for Speed Undercover. Vietcong 2 Free Download PC game setup in direct link for windows. Vietcong 2 is a tactical shooter game based on an interesting storyline. Download Game Dragon Keeper 2 Full Patch Link MF Download Game Dragon Keeper 2 Full.
And that’s before we even get started on the now-discredited DRMWhat Is DRM & Why Does It Exist If It's So Evil? [MakeUseOf Explains]What Is DRM & Why Does It Exist If It's So Evil? [MakeUseOf Explains]Digital Rights Management is the latest evolution of copy protection. It’s the biggest cause of user frustration today, but is it justified? Is DRM a necessary evil in this digital age, or is the model...Read More and its ill-conceived anti-piracy measures.
This is where No-CD cracks for CD and DVD come in handy. But are they still around, and why use them when alternative solutions are simpler?
Why Play Without a CD/DVD?
Sticking a gaming CD or DVD into your PC or laptop’s optical drive might not seem overly complex, but it can prove inconvenient, if not impossible. From DRM to hardware changes, the use of CDs and DVDs for installing games is slowly decreasing, as more and more gamers embrace digital distribution4 Reasons The Digital Distribution Of Video Games Will Make Your Life Better [MUO Gaming]4 Reasons The Digital Distribution Of Video Games Will Make Your Life Better [MUO Gaming]Video games are going digital; it is a fact that we cannot avoid. The chances are great that the next console generation will allow gamers to buy all of their games by downloading them directly...Read More.
While playing without a CD might be useful to video game pirates, it has other uses.
For instance, you might have a game with a scratched — and therefore useless — CD/DVD. After paying $40+ for the game, you probably want to get your money’s worth. While publishers have often provided replacement media in these situations in the past, it’s not a sustainable plan of action. If a publisher goes bust, the best you can do is head to eBay to look for a replacement.
Then there’s the changing pattern of hardware. An ever-declining piece of hardware in portable computers (notebooks, ultrabooks, etc.) is the optical (CD/DVD) drive. Moving parts mean extra weight and battery drain, so it makes sense. However, it means that to install a game from disc, you’ll need an external optical readerNo DVD Drive on Your Tablet or Notebook? Use an Old Laptop Drive Instead!No DVD Drive on Your Tablet or Notebook? Use an Old Laptop Drive Instead!Windows computers increasingly ship without optical drives. Here's how to use an old laptop DVD drive as an external drive.Read More. You don’t want to carry this around with you either, which means a no-CD crack is required for on-the-go gaming.
And, finally, you might just want to keep your game disc for admiring. More and more games are being released as premium versions with $100 bonus packs, often providing statuettes and attire alongside the game media and some in-game unlock codes. To keep the pack together, you might prefer not to use the disc. In most cases, digital distribution services would come in handy here, but there are still a few titles floating about that require the disc.
How a No-CD Crack Works
No-CD cracks work in a variety of ways.
It usually involves first installing the game, them looking for a registry entry, DLL (domain-link library), executable crack file, or a replacement EXE for the original game, or a combination of any of these. The new files are then added to the game directory on the hard disk drive (if any are duplicating existing files, these should be backed up) in order to make the game run without the disc.
While painted as a straightforward solution, it can get messy, especially if you’re a newcomer. It’s all too easy to find you’ve downloaded the wrong file, or deleted a vital file from the game directory. In most cases instructions are given, however, so make sure you take the time to read and re-read the steps before starting.
![Patch Patch](/uploads/1/2/6/2/126287409/869329676.jpg)
2 Safe Places You Can Find a No-CD Crack
Once upon a time, finding No-CD cracks was a dangerous pastime. Online resources were full of NSFW ads, popups and malware risksHow Not To Get Stung By Any Dodgy Malware-Ridden DownloadsHow Not To Get Stung By Any Dodgy Malware-Ridden DownloadsBut if you want to avoid the viruses, malware, crapware, and bloatware, then you need to be ultra-cautious about your download sources. So where can you download free software safely?Read More. Fortunately, things have been tidied up somewhat as trends have developed. While there is scant use for no-CD cracks on modern games, some sites still offer them for older games.
GameCopyWorld
Patches, fixes, trainers (offering unlimited health/ammo/etc) and No-CD/No-DVD cracks are available here, although the focus has shifted in recent years to trainers. A useful search tool on the right, however, will let you browse the site for older games available on optical disc, and any associated No-CD patches and EXEs.
GameBurnWorld
The similarly-named GameBurnWorld, meanwhile, tends to focus almost exclusively on trainers, but if you go digging you should find No-CD and No-DVD patches for older titles. Also available here are mini-tutorials and utilities to help you to create copies of your game media. This can be a useful alternative to using the original discs.
Why Are You Even Buying CDs?
Unless you’re picking up the game CD/DVD from a bargain bucket, or they’re limited edition boxes (as described above) then really is no reason to waste time with physical media in this day and age. The overwhelming majority of video games are available as digital downloads, mostly via Steam (although alternatives are availableTired of Steam? Here Are the Best Alternative Gaming ClientsTired of Steam? Here Are the Best Alternative Gaming ClientsNot everybody wants to use Steam! Want to know what else you can use? Here are a list of safe alternatives in gaming distribution websites and platforms!Read More). Better still, Steam enables you to add CD keys from many older games into your Steam library, thereby running the title without the disc.
As great as it is to have physical media for your PC games, its time has almost passed. Forget about the ritual of opening the box, admiring the disc and the artwork, and popping the media into the optical drive. This is now a thing of the past.
Instead, all you need is a double click to launch the game from your desktop, with the minimum of fuss.
What do you think? Is this a good development, or does it strip games of their cultural importance when physical art cannot be admired as part of the experience? Do you use No-CD cracks, or have you abandoned them for Steam and other solutions? Tell us in the comments.
Originally written by Simon Slangen on 30 April 2010.
Image Credit: maradon 333 via Shutterstock.com
Platforms: | PC |
Publisher: | Gathering of Developers |
Developer: | Pterodon Entertainment |
Genres: | Tactical Shooter |
Release Date: | March 26, 2003 |
Game Modes: | Singleplayer / Multiplayer |
This squad-based Vietnam shooter isn’t playing around.
You can cross this river and climb the ridge on the other side. Levels are fairly open-ended.
Try to be an optimist and be grateful that Vietcong, an import shooter covering the Vietnam war from a squad-based, story-driven perspective, could have blown so much more. In fact the game displays frequent bursts of genius, but its faults are noteworthy as well. You assume the role of one Steve Hawkins, a First Class Intelligence Sergent and strike team commander serving in Vietnam. Vietcong is primarily mission based, and encompasses the war from around the late 1960’s towards the mid 1970’s. Although you’ll trade some bullets with the NVA, your primary focus will be fighting the VC guerrilla regulars around the thick Vietnamese jungles.
Unlike most other shooters based on this war, Vietcong actually attempts to paint the conflict with some brushes of authenticity – you’ll learn about the former French colonial presence in Vietnam (and sometimes find remnants of their occupation), you’ll be treated to strict military lingo and operational procedures, and will find that tactics will win the day in armed engagements. For a developer based outside the United States, Pteredon seems to have done its research.
That pesky ‘realism’ schtick that so often hinders gameplay in other shooters is used quite effectively here, enhancing the entire experience rather rather subtracting from it. You have some degree of control over your squad, which number three to six people. All of these guys are specialized characters, ranging from a pointman who can find the safest route through the jungle, a medic that can stitch you back into shape in no time, plus an engineer, radio-man or a heavy machinegunner.
There are no artificial health pick-ups in Vietcong, and life is extremely fragile – even on the lowest difficulty, you won’t survive a full burst of AK fire at close range. Your medic can bring you back in fighting order, but every first-aid will sap your overall hitpoints by a small margin. Your radio-man is the second most interesting character, as you’ll have to keep your higher-ups informed and updated on your mission progress. Each important event has to be called in, and the game rewards you with auto-saves.
Missions, like the rest of the game, are treated as realistically as possible – you attend a briefing session beforehand, and are given time to prep up. This includes selecting your weapons of choice, browsing through intelligence data (ranging from short essays on VC guerrilla tactics, how to spot and disarm traps, weapon information cards and the ever expansive mission clipboard) or firing off a few rounds down at the range, which stocks up on new guns after each mission. Your arsenal is limited to one primary and one secondary weapon, plus a few grenades and a combat knife. You can trade your starting gear for anything you can scavenge on the battlefield, and the guns are all nicely modeled. For instance, you can switch between auto and semi-auto firing modes or aim down the sights for precise shots. Reloading will have you switch between magazines realistically, and grenades can be baked before throwing.
From open jungles to claustrophobic caves.
Assignments are far from predictable, taking you through every kind of imaginable scenario, some more enjoyable than others. The levels are absolutely gigantic – the introductory mission will have you drive to a nearby village. You get to experience the ride over there, then battle your way through a giant valley after the village comes under attack from a sniper, then get into some light jungle warfare after the sniper and his friends ambush you – all in just one level. But then again, you can save yourself some hurt by taking the sniper out from afar, prompting his friends to scatter away. Many levels feature secondary solutions or bonus objectives that can lead to different outcomes.
There’s a continuous sense of variety, but it doesn’t always work to Vietcong’s benefit. One stealth-based mission through a dark swamp involves rescuing a captured marine, and the experience is a dreadful tortilla of every bad stealth design element there is. The AI will wreak the most havoc, with squad units that continually fall behind or enemy soldiers that will spot and shoot you dead in pitch blackness. The scripting is in dire need of some rewriting in some places, where you could potentially break the level programming if you did the wrong things in the right order, requiring a restart. Other missions, like one where you’re tasked with defending a hill in the face of incoming enemy troops, is also potentially breakable.
So there’s Vietcong for you, a fascinating stew of clever design and awkward programming. Drop the stealth and polish the AI some more and this could have been a fantastic game. As it, however, it’s only halfheartedly great.
System Requirements: 700 Mhz CPU, 256 MB RAM, 32 MB Video, WinXP
IMPORTANT: This is a download button.
Please READ THIS before downloading!
Please READ THIS before downloading!
- Buy Game
www.amazon.com - Download Demo
fileplanet.com - Community Site
www.vietcong.info - Vintage Website
www.pterodon.com (archive.org)