Compara los precios de Call of Juarez: The Cartel en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por Techland. Publicado por Ubisoft. Lanzado el 13/9/2011. Disponible en PC, Xbox. Géneros: Action, Single Player, First Person, FPS / TPS, Adventure. Puntuación Metacritic: 51/100.

A notoriously rushed 2011 FPS that ditched Call of Juarez's Wild West identity for a modern drug-cartel setting. Its co-op secret-agenda system is genuinely clever; the execution is not.

Call of Juarez: The Cartel is a modern-day first-person shooter built around a three-player co-op campaign, where you pick one of three interagency misfits: Ben McCall (LAPD, descended from the series' original cowboy protagonist), Kim Evans (FBI), or Eddie Guerra (DEA). The setup sounds good on paper. Each character has a hidden agenda running parallel to the main mission, so while you and two friends are fighting through the streets of L.A. and later crossing into Mexico, you might be quietly stealing cartel drugs to cover a gambling debt, or lifting evidence files your boss told you to bury. Your partners only hear your side of the phone call when you get new orders. It creates a layer of real-time distrust inside a co-op game, and in 2011 almost nobody was doing that. Credit where it is due. The problem is that the shooting underneath all of that is deeply mediocre. Guns handle fine at a surface level - the AK-47 gets the job done at mid range, revolvers punch correctly, and peering down iron sights long enough kicks in a slight zoom - but enemy AI is passive and cover-addicted, time-to-kill feels inconsistent, and the weapon sandbox never evolves past a generic mix of pistols, shotguns, SMGs, and rifles with nothing interesting separating them. Mission structure is repetitive to the point of comedy: drive somewhere, talk briefly, clear a series of arena rooms, get in a car chase, repeat. The car chases in particular wear out their welcome within the first two hours. Concentration mode (a bullet-time ability inherited from earlier entries) is available with any weapon here, which is a mechanical upgrade on paper, but the implementation is throwaway. The PC version launched months after consoles and arrived in worse shape. Audio cuts out mid-fight, enemies clip through cover, subtitles contradict spoken dialogue, and the competitive multiplayer mode - cops versus cartel across team deathmatch and objective-based Missions - was already a ghost town on day one. The partner system in multiplayer, where sticking close to one assigned teammate gives both of you a damage bonus, is a decent hook that nobody got to enjoy because population was essentially zero at launch. In 2015, Techland's own CEO publicly called the game a mistake, and the title has since been delisted from all major digital storefronts. If you are reading this, you found it somewhere very specific. The competitive challenge system in co-op is worth one sentence of genuine praise: each player occasionally gets a private objective mid-combat (a headshot quota, a melee kill count) and when one of you hits it, the others instantly fail theirs. It is petty, it is fun for about twenty minutes, and then the interface clutter buries it. Giant HUD notifications obscure the screen during firefights. The single-player AI ignores its own secret agenda entirely, removing the only hook that makes the mode interesting. Play it solo and you are left with a corridor shooter with no personality and a habit of crashing. There is a version of this game that works, and it requires exactly three friends, a tolerance for clunky production values, and zero interest in netcode quality or ranked anything. If you want to feel the texture of a genuinely unfinished 2011 FPS with one legitimately original idea trapped inside it, it is a historical curiosity. If you want a shooter that respects your time, look at Call of Juarez: Gunslinger, which came after this and is the apology. Fred, Scout Team

Call of Juarez: The Cartel
ActionSingle PlayerFirst PersonFPS / TPSAdventure

Call of Juarez: The Cartel

13 sept 2011TechlandUbisoft
GamerScout opina

A notoriously rushed 2011 FPS that ditched Call of Juarez's Wild West identity for a modern drug-cartel setting. Its co-op secret-agenda system is genuinely clever; the execution is not.

PCXbox
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Call of Juarez: The Cartel is a modern-day first-person shooter built around a three-player co-op campaign, where you pick one of three interagency misfits: Ben McCall (LAPD, descended from the series' original cowboy protagonist), Kim Evans (FBI), or Eddie Guerra (DEA). The setup sounds good on paper. Each character has a hidden agenda running parallel to the main mission, so while you and two friends are fighting through the streets of L.A. and later crossing into Mexico, you might be quietly stealing cartel drugs to cover a gambling debt, or lifting evidence files your boss told you to bury. Your partners only hear your side of the phone call when you get new orders. It creates a layer of real-time distrust inside a co-op game, and in 2011 almost nobody was doing that. Credit where it is due. The problem is that the shooting underneath all of that is deeply mediocre. Guns handle fine at a surface level - the AK-47 gets the job done at mid range, revolvers punch correctly, and peering down iron sights long enough kicks in a slight zoom - but enemy AI is passive and cover-addicted, time-to-kill feels inconsistent, and the weapon sandbox never evolves past a generic mix of pistols, shotguns, SMGs, and rifles with nothing interesting separating them. Mission structure is repetitive to the point of comedy: drive somewhere, talk briefly, clear a series of arena rooms, get in a car chase, repeat. The car chases in particular wear out their welcome within the first two hours. Concentration mode (a bullet-time ability inherited from earlier entries) is available with any weapon here, which is a mechanical upgrade on paper, but the implementation is throwaway. The PC version launched months after consoles and arrived in worse shape. Audio cuts out mid-fight, enemies clip through cover, subtitles contradict spoken dialogue, and the competitive multiplayer mode - cops versus cartel across team deathmatch and objective-based Missions - was already a ghost town on day one. The partner system in multiplayer, where sticking close to one assigned teammate gives both of you a damage bonus, is a decent hook that nobody got to enjoy because population was essentially zero at launch. In 2015, Techland's own CEO publicly called the game a mistake, and the title has since been delisted from all major digital storefronts. If you are reading this, you found it somewhere very specific. The competitive challenge system in co-op is worth one sentence of genuine praise: each player occasionally gets a private objective mid-combat (a headshot quota, a melee kill count) and when one of you hits it, the others instantly fail theirs. It is petty, it is fun for about twenty minutes, and then the interface clutter buries it. Giant HUD notifications obscure the screen during firefights. The single-player AI ignores its own secret agenda entirely, removing the only hook that makes the mode interesting. Play it solo and you are left with a corridor shooter with no personality and a habit of crashing. There is a version of this game that works, and it requires exactly three friends, a tolerance for clunky production values, and zero interest in netcode quality or ranked anything. If you want to feel the texture of a genuinely unfinished 2011 FPS with one legitimately original idea trapped inside it, it is a historical curiosity. If you want a shooter that respects your time, look at Call of Juarez: Gunslinger, which came after this and is the apology.

Fred
Fred · Scout Team

Shooters

Etiquetas

steamCo-op CampaignSecret AgendasNeo-WesternCover-Based CombatConcentration ModeObjective-Based MultiplayerThree-Character RosterDelisted Title

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

Memory
1GB Windows XP, 2GB Windows Vista/7 (2GB Windows XP, 3GB Windows Vista/7)
Storage
8GB
Graphics
DirectX 9.0c - Nvidia 8800GT /ATI 3850 (Nvidia GTX 260/ATI 4870)
Processor
Intel Core 2 Duo 2GHz, AMD Athlon 64 X2 2Ghz (Intel Core 2 Duo 3GHz, AMD Athlon 64 X2 3Ghz)
System requirements
Windows XP/Visa/7

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Reseñas y valoraciones

Metacritic
51

Información del juego

Desarrolladora
Techland
Distribuidora
Ubisoft
Fecha de lanzamiento
13 sept 2011

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Call of Juarez: The Cartel?

Call of Juarez: The Cartel está disponible en PC, Xbox.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Call of Juarez: The Cartel?

Call of Juarez: The Cartel se lanzó el 13 de septiembre de 2011.

¿Quién desarrolló Call of Juarez: The Cartel?

Call of Juarez: The Cartel fue desarrollado por Techland y publicado por Ubisoft.

¿Merece la pena comprar Call of Juarez: The Cartel?

Call of Juarez: The Cartel tiene una puntuación Metacritic de 51/100, lo que lo convierte en uno de los títulos destacados de Action. Mira las reseñas completas, las valoraciones y los tiempos de duración en esta página para decidir.