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This product is currently out of stock
Product Details:
Product Weight: 0.25 pounds
Package Length: 7.6 inches
Package Width: 5.3 inches
Package Height: 1.2 inches
Package Weight: 0.1 pounds
Release Date: September 02, 1998
Average Customer Rating: based on 44 reviews
Game Information:
Platform: Windows 98 / Windows Me / Windows 95
Media: CD-ROM
Item Quantity: 1
 
 

Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:3.5 ( 44 customer reviews )
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

54 of 56 found the following review helpful:

4A good game, but buy the Iron Blitz Edition!  Nov 17, 1999

This is the original Axis and Allies computer game. It is a fun game to play and plays exactly like the board game: units, technologies, game play, are all just like the board game the only thing missing are the pieces. The biggest problem is that the computer players are extremely weak, which means you will not have a good time playing this game alone. A related problem is that during multi-player games some rather strange things can happen, you will definitely need the patch offered at in order to play over the net or via direct connect successfully. So you cannot play it solo for very long and have fun and you may experience problems playing real live opponents, why should you buy this game? Well the game is very, very good at allowing you to practice, using the 'standard' opening moves or perhaps coming up with some new stategies in a quick manner. The game also supports the ability to use a 'time machine' to go back and replay a phase or whole turn over again, allowing you to try various things within a turn. This is extremely nice and no die-hard Axis and Allies board game player should be without a copy of the computer version. Just do not buy this edition of the game...read on...

The game has a new version: Axis and Allis: Iron Blitz Edition. This is NOT an expansion of the regular computer game, it is a complete version that tends to work better and has an expanded editor: Buy the Iron Blitz version of Axis and Allies, not this one!

30 of 30 found the following review helpful:

4Despite compromises, A&A is a great WWII strategy game!  Jan 22, 2004
By Alex Diaz-Granados "fardreaming writer"
One of the best map board-based war games of all time, Milton Bradley's Axis & Allies is an interesting and very exciting World War II strategy game. In college days of yore, a friend of mine and I bought our first game, with its hundreds of game pieces, dice, rulebook and colorful world map depicting a (very stylized) view of the war situation in the spring of 1942.

Axis & Allies is -- if you can still find a copy, that is -- a beautiful board game to see and play, but its main drawback is that it's time consuming to set up. You can't place your forces at random; each of the five major powers (USSR, Germany, United Kingdom, Japan and the U.S.) has a card telling players where they have to place their initial forces...on color coded regions all over the world. This process alone can take up at least 15 minutes, perhaps more.

Another problem was the duration of game play. Depending on one's grasp of the basic rules and analytical skills -- and my analytical skills were, back then, pretty rudimentary -- a single turn could take up more than 15 minutes, since each turn is divided into various steps (Weapons Development, Unit Purchase, Combat Moves, Non Combat Moves, and Fund Collection). Depending on your strategy and tactical realities at any given point, you can skip most of these if you have no viable options -- just don't forget to collect your funds, but in most cases the player who neglects a step can find him- or herself in deep trouble. That's one reason turns take so long. (The other is, of course, that you have to physically move the pieces, consult the game card and/or the rule book and roll the dice. As a result, if your circle of friends doesn't include a very patient war game enthusiast, your board game version of Axis & Allies will end up sitting in a closet gathering dust.

Fortunately, Axis & Allies was popular enough that the now-vanished MicroProse Software (original publishers of Sid Meier's Civilization series, as well as Silent Service II and the F-15 Strike Eagle series) adapted it to the more versatile and easier to manage CD-ROM format in the late 1990s.

While the board game's highly stylized (and simplified) map and its bright color coded spaces remain the same in the computer version, memory constrains forced the MicroProse/Hasbro Interactive/Infogrames programmers to make some compromises. For instance, infantry units in the board game were made to resemble soldiers of their particular nation-state; British soldiers wore their distinctive WWI-style helmets, while German soldiers wore their coal scuttle "Fritz" head gear. In the PC game the soldiers are generic but color-coded. However, to make up for this, players' planes change their appearance when Weapons Development attempts result in long-range or jet-powered aircraft.

Otherwise, the basics of the game remain the same. Players can still build up their forces and launch multiple campaigns. Combat is still resolved by rolls of the dice, and the results are still determined by each unit's attack/defense points. (Example, an Infantry unit attacks at a paltry roll of one, but defends at two, reflecting the advantages of being dug in and fortified.)

The beauty of the PC version is that you can play it solo against the PC or in multi-player mode over the Internet or even as a "hot seat" game. Setup is no longer a tedious chore; just place the disc in the drive and you are good to go. You can save the game at any point during a turn, something not easy to do in the board game (unless, of course, you have a dedicated game room and took notes on what transpired during the last turn!)

Axis & Allies' artificial intelligence player(s) can be adjusted from Easy to Difficult by choosing a particular general and rank (Eisenhower and four stars being the best for the Americans, just to give you an example), so this version is good for novice players as well as veterans of the original board game. Furthermore, the cinematics used in "cutscenes" -- showing, say, a submarine making an attack or a squadron of bombers carrying out a raid -- are, even for a 1996-98 vintage game, impressive.

Because Axis & Allies is an old game by PC game standards, even though I ordered it here on Amland I had to buy it used from a Marketplace seller, so I did not get a handy manual that explains the rules (although the board game rules can be a helpful substitute, the PC version's rules have resolved some nagging issues that plagued board game players) or the various FAQ's about mouse controls and the like. Not that it's hard to figure out...I am no tech wizard and I have figured most of those issues on my own. Infogrames (which owns what once was MicroProse/Hasbro Interactive) also has a download section on its website (www.infogrames.com) that has patches to fix a few bugs that affect both the game's appearance and playability.

22 of 23 found the following review helpful:

5Axis and Allies...An entertaining computer game!  May 16, 2000
By Joseph Payne
Axis and Allies is deffinately one of my favorite computer games. Although their have been many complaints of bugs on this game, it is well worth the money (you can download a patch for the bugs) This game offers good historical features of World War II, and anybody who likes World War II gaming will love this game! Even though a good game, I still enjoy the board game better. This game features excellent unit pictures and map, and will teach you a lot when it comes to stragety. (This game is all about stragety!) Although I would recommend the new "Axis and Allies Iron Blitz" Addition. It comes with many more features, including much better unit pictures historically accurate to the country's nationallity. It also comes with a much better computer intellegence. Overall, this game is a blast, and anybody who loves stragety games will not regret this game. Get it!

25 of 29 found the following review helpful:

2Great Game, Astonishingly (Bad) Software  Nov 23, 2000
By Robert L. Field
"Axis and Allies" is a classic, well-balanced wargame that is easy to learn and play. It offers fantastic interaction between allies and manages to convey some of the complexity of strategic decision-making without bogging the player down in details like logistics or politics.

This software, however, is one of the worst-written things I have ever seen. It even plays like it's not object-oriented, the same parameters being controlled in different ways on different screens. It is full of bugs that are resolved by none of the available patches. In the Iron Blitz version, for example, if you are the defender in a naval battle and your only unit is a destroyer, the enemy's submarine hit will freeze the game because it does not check to see if there are units left to receive normal hits. When I complained about this bug, Tech Support told me to replace my video drivers! Pretty useless advice from a bad Tech Support Dept.

The AI, is, of course, simply horrible. If I were that bad, I wouldn't play. The AI lacks agression and buys pointless units. This game is not that hard to play, there is no excuse for this shoddy software.

It is playable with other humans, but Hasbro should rewrite it from scratch, using skilled coding and modern technique, because this implementation is not worthy of such a great game, or even of Hasbro itself. If that company's toy cars were so poorly designed and manufactured, the company would likely be defunct.

6 of 6 found the following review helpful:

4New version coming in Dec '01.  Jun 08, 2001
By Sierra Nevada
This title is out of print and almost impossible to find. That said, it is possible to pick up copies second-hand. So here are a few pointers: 1) This version of this game has been accused of being "rushed out the door". Gameplay is OK, AI is weak, parts were pretty buggy. The bugs have largely been fixed if you download the latest patch. 2) There's a second, "iron blitz" edition which is also out of print. 3) Hasbro is addressing all this by planning a new version (Axis & Allies II), expected in december 2001.

See all 44 customer reviews on Amazon.com

 
 
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