About
All Feedback (879)
- flipify (24410)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
- second.sale (4269571)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseHope to deal with you again. Thank you.
- cassiecosmetics (66459)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseA valueable member of the ebay community!!! Wonderful, wonderful, wonderful!!!!
- sellsim_2day_shipping- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchase***** AWESOME 5 STARS *****
- goodwillrs (288766)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGreat eBayer!
- tradepostentertainment (7479)- Feedback left by buyer.More than a year agoVerified purchaseGood buyer, prompt payment, valued customer, highly recommended.
Reviews (5)
04 Mar, 2012
Rage rocks. Take on post-apocalyptic gangs and the evil Authority.
1 of 1 found this helpful Rage takes you through a post-acocalyptic world, this time destroyed by an asteroid. It has extreme play value where you (I won't give away where you came from) earn credits, buy weapons and other things like hot dune buggies, and clean out pockets of gangs. In the background, there's a force that's trying to rule the whole mess, the Authority. This is a game you'll play over and over.
04 Aug, 2011
Apocalypse Now is one of the two best Vietnam movies ever made
There are two great Vietnam movies: Apocalpse Now and Platoon. Platoon captures in intimate detail what it was like to be there, right down to hootch details. Apocalypse captures the psychotic quality of the expererience. There was a reason we referred to home as "the real world". Apocalypse captures in spades the unreal, twisted feeling of being there. It is a movie masterpiece.
13 Jun, 2009
Apoclypse Now
As a Viet Nam vet, I have to say that Apocalypse Now best captures the psychotic edge of that experience. For realism down to the last detail, Platoon wins hands down, but Apocalypse Now captures the unreal feeling of that war. There was a reason that troops in the Nam referred to home as "the real world," and Apocalypse Now captures the essence that gave birth to that phrase.