

Conceptually, it is definitely intriguing to see how a character might be different in a different time or a world with different rules, so it’s no surprise the idea found purchase in places besides video games, and it certainly seems like those other mediums could better tap into what should be appealing about such a crossover. Plucking four different versions of the characters from different comic book universes Marvel had made, Beenox’s 2010 action game had such a strong concept that even the comic books would borrow it for the 2014 Spider-Verse story arc that in turn inspired the animated film. But get it on a console if you can, the PC version makes a rockstar port look like gold.Back before Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse introduced most of the world to the idea of multiple Spider-Men from alternate dimensions, there was Spider-Man: Shattered Dimensions. Basically, if you are a die hard fan of spidey, this might be worth a look depending on if you can get it cheap, or rent it.

I didnt like the mysterio in the opening cutscene, but i've warmed to him. (January 5th 2012) Still the games not complete crap, the button delay is less noticable(Still enough to irritate me) if you drop your settings to maximum which is the only way i've been able to move forward, the levels are paced nicely and the villains are represented very nicely. This is something that should have been fixed in a patch, but it hasn't come yet so i'd feel pretty confident saying they dont care about their crappy port and will not be patching it.

But the game has horrible input lag, despite the smooth framerate.

I can run witcher on medium settings, skyrim and arkham city on nearly max. My specs FAR exceed the minimum and reccomended, 460 GTX, I72630QM Sandy bridge, 8 GB of 1333MHz RAM. It's got a passable story, good enough not to turn me away from webswinging. It's got a passable story, good enough not to turn me away from I really wanted this game to be good, i tried to like it. I really wanted this game to be good, i tried to like it.
