Delivery & Return:Free shipping on all orders over $50
Estimated Delivery:7-15 days international
People:7 people viewing this product right now!
Easy Returns:Enjoy hassle-free returns within 30 days!
Payment:Secure checkout
SKU:37532675
Go pick on someone your own size!Product InformationThe Ant Bully tells a witty and heartwarming story about a 10-year old boywho embarks on a remarkable journey. New in town friendless and tormentedby a neighborhood bully young Lucas Nickle has been taking out his frustrationon the innocent ant hill in his yard. But one day the antsretaliate. Using a magic potion the ants shrink Lucas down to ant sizeand sentence him to live like an ant in their colony. In this strange newworld Lucas will learn important lessons about team work get a whole newperspective on life and ultimately discover the courage to stand up for himself.Based on the exciting journey of the digitally animated family adventure The AntBully experience the perils of an ant's world as you evolve from recluse tohero in a quest to save the colony from extermination.Product Features Play as Lucas as you fight like an ant in a human sized world. Experience thrilling adventures like hand gliding and flying on wasps. Unleash your super strength and defy gravity. Use telepathy to overe obstacles.Windows Requirements Windows 2000 XP 1.4 GHz Pentium III 1.2 GHz Athlon or 2220+ Sempron processor 256 MB of RAM DirectX 9.0 pliant Video Card GeForce 5 or better DirectX 9.0 pliant Audio Card CD-ROM drive
Midway 50066 The Ant Bully PC
Game ran just fine, everything was in the box, disk was unscratched, and it installed as quickly as can be expected for a disk based game. But when I tried to fire it up, I got this unfunny little launcher instead of an actual game (or an actual game launcher). Windows gave me a big ol' red "ADMINISTRATOR HAS BLOCKED YOU FROM DOING THIS" warning when I tried to hit accept, and looking that FAQ there lead me to discover it uses russian DRM StarForce, which is possibly (probably) spyware, installs drivers that don't actually fully uninstall, and are suspiciously still available despite being out of use for presumably over half a decade. (The reasoning being that if it really is benign and they're getting nothing out of it, why are they paying to keep it live?) If you're looking for a display piece for some reason go ahead; otherwise stay away.