All our themes are located at a single download page for ease of exploring and download for our readers. The themes are located at the Windows 7 Themes Gallery page. This page shows the most popular downloads in the Top Section and various other themes are listed in their respective categories just below this section. If you are a regular visitor, you must be familiar with this page. Each theme has its dedicated download page. You can click on the link for any of the themes listed in the gallery and you would be taken to the download page for that theme.
We have tried to give each and every detail for the theme on the download page. You can see the Theme Description, its release date, the category it was posted in, the number of times it was downloaded and most importantly the download button.
When you click on the theme download button — we initialize the download and you would see the download window pop-up. Once the download has completed open the folder where you have saved the theme. Here you would see the compressed zip file for the theme. In order to open a theme file you need to install a Zip Software like 7-zip recommended or Winrar.
Many of you would already have one of these on your computers, since its widely used by computer savvy users. In order to install the theme on your computer, you would need to extract it first with a compression software like 7-Zip, Winzip or Winrar mentioned above. The theme would be extracted with a few seconds and a new folder with the theme file would be created automatically. As you progress through the game, you can sell your park and then move to a new location in the world to try and start a new park.
I must admit that the Sega version of Theme Park is the roughest looking of the bunch. The PC version and the bit versions have a ton of personality, but here in order to fit this massive game on a cartridge, they had to cut back the graphics considerably.
The rides look decent enough, but when you move the screen, things can go to hell and the game looks flat out weird! There is just not as much polish here at all as there is in the other versions of the game. The music repeats the whole time you play it and gets very annoying. When you go to a different ride the music will change which I like. Still, just play your own music as you play this and you will have a much better time.
Look, this is Theme Park, but it is probably the weakest version that I have played. I know that a lot of people have trouble using the controller for this game. I never felt that was the issue, instead, it was many of the gameplay features that caused me problems.
To start with the handymen flat out do not clean unless you manually make them do so which takes up far too much time, especially if you have a large park.
Worst of all is the speed that the days move, there is no way to slow this down and it is not uncommon to spend a month building a path! As a matter of fact, I would say that if you grew up with this as your only version of Theme Park you will have very fond memories of the game. It is not bad, it really is not.
However, when you have played the other versions of Theme Park, there is no getting away from the fact that this one here is probably the weakest of the bunch. Probably the easiest way to "explain" Theme Park and chances are that you will have guessed from the intro is that it's like Sim City or Sim City You start off with so much cash, a blank canvas and an aim i.
However, that brief explanation is actually doing Theme Park a disservice because, when you get down to it, the sheer depth of the thing actually makes the Sim City duo seem a bit "empty". Yes, empty. In Sim City there wasn't actu-ally a "game". Well, there was and there wasn't, but you know what I mean: it was a software toy, and there's nothing wrong with that. However, in Theme Park, there most definitely is a game - it sets its own pace and you have to do as well as you can within its structure.
For instance as you progress, the difficulty level ups itself. And there are all kinds of variables happening below the surface, too So as well as worrying about the everyday design and running of your park, you also have to worry about possible take-over bids and the such like. You can dabble on the stock-market yourself. There are other neat touches that add to Theme Park making it a greater overall experience than the Maxis equivalents.
Wage negotiations, for example. When you've got a thriving park you really are dependent on your staff: especially the mechanics. If a ride goes wrong and isn't attended to in time, there's a danger of it blowing up - which not only has disastrous effects on your reputation, but also damages the ground on which the ride was placed.
Rocks appear which you can't get rid of, meaning you have to rebuild around them. So imagine the scene. You've got a large park with, say, 20 rides. At least one will be on the blink, and so you've got four mechanics on the payroll. Hunky dory. Then shazam, up pops the Wage Negotiation screen.
You've got about 30 seconds to agree a new set wage with the trade union geezer, and failure to do so will see the staff walking out on strike. It's a nightmare, believe me. Ditto this for the Supplier Negotiation screen You have to haggle them down. Fail to reach an agreement in time and they'll pull their services.
And there's so much more. Loads of hidden things that leap out at you when you least expect them to. Suffice to say, and I've said it already, that Theme Park is deep - which is something you wouldn't guess from the jokey graphics. Oh, and on the subject of the jokey graphics, they're brilliant.
Really funny. Typical Bullfrog attention to detail. You've Got To Hand it to Bullfrog, haven't you, seeing as it has never actually produced a naff game. And the one that really kicked the company off. Populous , had such universal appeal that there was even a grand two player championship in Japan a couple of years ago.
Company boss Peter Molyneux was flown over to participate and got beaten in the finals because there was a tv camera behind him, meaning he couldn't activate his special inbuilt cheat mode without being caught on film. That was then and this is now -that was Populous and this is Theme Park. So what's it all about, this Theme Park caper?
What will you be able to do with it? Will it be crap? Or what? Well, the game code itself - and you wouldn't guess at this from a cursory glance at the graphics - is actually extremely deep, with many 'levels' to it. This will become clearer as we go on. On the surface, however, it couldn't be simpler.
In Sim City you had to build and then manage a city. In Theme Park you have to build and manage a theme park. Over to Peter Molyneux, Bullfrog boss, to explain how easy the game is to operate: 'I wanted the interface to be so simple to use that you wouldn't even think about it I wanted it to be like using a paint package. While very much along the same lines as the interface in Sim City the game it's going to be compared to the most, let's face it , Theme Park's interface is even more intuitive.
You just paint things down. Click, hold and drag with the mouse. Paths, for instance, or lakes, or trees or fences. If you don't like the look of whatever you've produced you can just rub bits out using the rubber and add other bits in later. The computer knows exactly what you're up to and won't complain. But making a theme park isn't just about having attractive-looking paths and streams. If you are someone who loves to follow the latest in technology news, you have probably seen a sneak peek of what Windows 8 is set to look like a.
Although this is a lightweight program, it is powerful in perfo. Windows 7 Service Pack 1 SP1 is a free upgrade for the Windows operating system 7 which is also accessible for download via the Microsoft website. SP1 has been developed by Microsoft to make it comp. Download Latest Version for Windows. Download Latest Version for Free. Wallpapers Bot. BioniX Wallpaper. Aquarium Animated Wallpaper. Animated Matrix Code Wallpaper. Push Video Wallpaper. Desktop Weather. Windows 7 Dreamscene Installer.
Call of Duty Theme It is so interesting to see how people redesign a Call of Duty theme to make it look different from the others. Windows 7 Service Pack 1 Windows 7 Service Pack 1 is an important system update that includes performance, stability and security improvements for Windows 7.
Marvel's The Avengers Wallpapers Marvel's The Avengers is a top selling blockbuster movie of , and it has certainly done a lot to lift the popularity of its licensed comic book merchandise. Dark Theme If you want a unique look for your Windows 7 PC, it's best to stick with one color scheme.
0コメント