Emergency Room: Life or Death
- Experience intense life-threatening cases in this exciting approach game
- Brilliant from 100 fascinating cases; medical database provides clues
- Each case is truly a matter of life or death with critical circumstances
- Control 40 different tools and diagnostic tests; watch 250+ video segments
- For 1 player
Product Description
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Too terrible we can’t try these things out before we buy them! This “game” is limited in scope and, after the third crash, I gave up on it. Give me The Sims any day!
Rating: 1 / 5
I bought this game, as a critical care nurse, for the fun of it. Too terrible, as I can easily diagnose the problems and know what to do next, I can’t get the software to do what I want. For example, when a patient has a “cardiac arrest”, (has a lethal arrhythmia) I want to get the defibrillator and shock, but I can’t get the software to do it…so the chief doctor comes on and says I’ve killed the patient. So much for fun!
Rating: 1 / 5
First off.. I bought this thinking it was for a DS.. not the PC… but attempted to play anyways.. and it wasn’t very simple… I felt like I was missing steps.. and couldn’t figure out the assessment.. and drawing conclusions.. I donno.. certainly wouldn’t recommend it!… and I’m a RN
Rating: 1 / 5
I delight in watching the TV show ER. So that has inspired me to learn all that I can about disease and being a doctor. When I heard about this game, I just HAD to get it. So I have been playing this game, It’s diffucult and has some Feisty personality. But it really encourages you to do EVERYTHING right, and that is how it has to be in real life. The one thing that I can’t stand is exactly how to do some discharge and get points, because it isn’t mentioned anywhere.
Rating: 4 / 5
The plus side is that it isn’t a first-person shooter. The minus side is that after a while it feels like “physician” (the Hasbro game with the cartoon body and the buzzers) spiced up with quicktime mini-movies.
As a rapidly rising doctor in a busy emergency room you cooperate with a photo-real patient within the context of Exam Room, Lab, Imaging, and Treatment. As you apply the tools (EKG, and stethoscope, x-ray and blood workup, oxygen and I.V…) to the appropriate body parts, and make the right entries in your chart, your score rises. At various junctures actor-described characters (the crusty Chief of Staff, the caring young Intern), will speak to you and perhaps share a small of their own tale.
Rating: 3 / 5