

Time Travel, Dinosaurs, Aliens, Cybernetic Dinosaurs, Evil Soldiers, Bad-Ass Weaponry, Fast-Paced Action… what more could you want! Oh yeah, Big Head mode! So, not only will Turok have to deal with this evil being, but he’ll also have to deal with all of the hostile creatures who lie within this sacred realm as well as the hordes of soldiers The Campaigner is teleporting in and even cybernetically enhanced dinosaurs which are under his control. Unfortunately, this didn’t stop The Campaigner, an evil overlord who has ventured into The Lost Land in the hope of obtaining all the pieces and using the weapon for his own evil schemes. However, The Lost Land also contains fragments of the Chronscepter, a weapon that was broken into fragments to prevent the wrong hands from getting hold of it. It’s in here where you’ll find creatures ranging from dinosaurs to otherworldly beings. Turok is merely a title that is given to the eldest male within a tribe as generations pass, you are basically a protector of The Lost Land, a place where time has no meaning. You are Turok, a Native American who can travel through time who is armed, initially, with only his trusty knife and bow. If you’ve never heard of Turok before, grab onto your butts as it’s got one hell of a concept behind it. This intro had me shrieking! So nostalgic! Does the game still stand up today, after all of the advancements we’ve received over the years in terms of First Person Shooters? I’ve played around 10 hours of the game so far so I think it’s time to take a look as I grab my bow, stand proudly, and shout out loud “I am Turok!” So, after 22 years, the first game in the franchise has come home and landed back on a Nintendo console in the form of a rather unusual remaster.

However, the original Turok: Dinosaur Hunter is an iconic game that almost every N64 owner I knew owned a copy of.

Four main games and a spin-off were released on Nintendo consoles, Turok, Turok 2, Turok 3, Turok: Evolution, and Turok: Rage Wars (which was my favourite) before it was pretty much rebooted into the 2008 edition on the Xbox 360 and PS3. If you have nGlide or other GPU emulators installed: make sure you remove the Video_3DFx.dll, Video_PowerVR.dll and Video_RagePro.dll files from your Turok installation, otherwise the game might try to use another renderer instead of the Direct3D one.Turok: Dinosaur Hunter has returned! I know a lot of people claim Mario and Link are the Nintendo mascots, but back on the N64, I would personally have placed Turok himself within the list of the infamous faces you can relate to a product.For widescreen support: Press the "Patch Turok.exe to apply widescreen fix" button and locate Turok.exe like above (you can also use this fix to increase the overall game FOV with a 4:3 aspect ratio but it will make in-game models a bit narrower).In the game's launcher, use the Video menu to select Perfomance Settings and check the 800圆00 checkbox (note that if the checkbox is not available and window doesn't mention Direct3D the game probably loaded another renderer - remove the DLL files mentioned in the last step below).Using the dialog box that will appear, locate the Video_D3D.dll file in your Turok installation.Press the "Patch Video_D3D.dll to apply custom resolution" button.Replace 800 and 600 in the fields with the resolution you want to use (note that for a high resolution, such as 2560x1440, you may need to use dgVoodoo 2.
#TUROK DINOSAUR HUNTERPC DOWNLOAD#
Download turokfix.exe ( PCGamingWiki mirror) and run it.For Vista and later: make sure you have Turok installed in a folder that can be modified by regular programs (e.g.Before applying the patch, make a backup of the Turok.exe and Video_D3D.dll files in case the modifications go wrong.
