Nintendo 3DS edition boasts a few unique features, however. "You'll be
hacking quite a bunch of computers and those hacks are handled with a spatial
puzzle. Select from a half-dozen puzzle pieces to guess which fits a broken
cube," Goldstein describes. "Also new in Splinter Cell 3D is a nifty bit of
presentation called 'projected text.' Tips and objectives are written out on the NBA 2K18 MT
walls.""Though it doesn't seem like Ubisoft put a ton of effort into this one,
they did manage to get the
right," Goldstein admits."...But what made Chaos Theory great was the enemy
AI, and that's where Ubisoft failed in bringing Splinter Cell to 3DS," Goldstein
warns. "The stealth breaks down to the Buy NBA Live Mobile Coins point that there's little reason to sneak
around. These are some dumb terrorists. Despite its many shortcomings, Splinter
Cell 3D is still fun to play," Goldstein says.Jane Douglas at GameSpot rates
Splinter Cell 3D at 5.5 out of 10. "Splinter Cell 3D is another attempt at a
handheld
of Chaos Theory," she writes, "and though this reworking benefits from the
3DS's new controls and, to some extent, from its extra graphical oomph, it is an
insubstantial offering: the original game's single-player campaign re-created in
3D, with a couple of forgettable minigames. Beyond the 3D visuals, there's no
big innovation for the 3DS."Visually, the game is an improvement over previous
handheld editions. "With Splinter Cell 3D hitched to the 3DS's greater graphical
horsepower
it's not so plagued by juddering frame rates as the nba18mt original DS's Chaos
Theory, but visually speaking, it's hardly slick," Douglas recalls. "Other 3DS
launch titles have higher frame rates, though rates here are at least steady
with the 3D slider up or down.""Splinter Cell 3D offers a reasonably long
single-player campaign, with multiple secondary mission objectives for
completionists to chase," Douglas writes. "The total absence of multiplayer,
though, is a huge letdown. There's no