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Prison Break: The Conspiracy Review

Posted by GameIsLyf Monday, June 14, 2010

Developer(s): ZootFly
Publisher(s): Deep Silver
Distributor(s): Koch Media, SouthPeak Games[citation needed] Platform(s): Microsoft Windows, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Release date(s): EU March 26, 2010 NA March 30, 2010 Genre(s) Action-adventure Mode(s)
Single-player
Rating(s) ESRB: T PEGI: 16+
Media: DVD (PC/360), Blu-ray Disc (PS3)

Prison Break: The Conspiracy is an action-adventure video game based on the first season of the Fox television series Prison Break, released for Microsoft Windows, Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3.

It was released on March 19, 2010 in Germany, March 26, 2010 in the United Kingdom and Europe, and March 30, 2010 in North America. The game had been in development for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 for release in February 2009, but was canceled when Brash Entertainment closed down. However, ZootFly continued the development and self-funded the project for 13 months. Once the game was polished and nearly finished, it was picked up by new publisher Deep Silver.

Minimum System Requirements:

CPU: Intel Pentium IV at 2.0 GHz or Equivalent AMD
RAM: 1 GB RAM
VGA: 256 MB VRAM – nVidia GeForce 7800 / ATI Radeon X1800
DX: DirectX 9.0c
OS: Microsoft Windows XP / Windows Vista / Windows 7
HDD: 2 GB of free Hard Drive Space

Recommended System Requirements:

CPU: Any Dual Core Processor at 2.0 GHz
RAM: 2 GB RAM
VGA: 512 MB VRAM – nVidia GeForce 8800 / ATI Radeon HD 3870
DX: DirectX 9.0c
OS: Microsoft Windows XP / Windows Vista / Windows 7
HDD: 2 GB of free Hard Drive Space
Sound: DirectX Compatible Sound Card
Disc Drive: 8x DVD-ROM Drive



The events of Prison Break: The Conspiracy run concurrently with those of the series’ first season. It’s outcome is the same – they escape – and it doesn’t reveal anything that will please fans or cast new light on the show’s characters or plot lines. If you’re an absolute Prison Break diehard, don’t buy this game – steal a copy instead, surrender yourself to the police and then get sent to an actual jail – because serving a real sentence couldn’t possibly be harder time than this.

Preview Trailer

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