All About PC Games and Online Games

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Video Game Review - Scott Pilgrim Vs The World - The Game


Ubisoft's precious very little game will fight with the big dogs.
There are gamers out there who can never even strive Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World: The Game.

Most seasoned gamers can in all probability notice the last 2 words of the sport's title, and sprint for Bobby Kotick's hills like they'd from an Uwe Boll production. There's frankly a better likelihood of them giving
Scott Pilgrim Vs. the world: The breakfast cereal a shot, and that is rather unfortunate, but understandable. Games based mostly on movie and/or comic licenses rarely ever shine with the standard their licenses deserve. However Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World, based mostly on Bryan Lee O'Malley's cult hit comic series, on the opposite hand, shines with the care, respect, and polish that made Castle Crashers an arcade hit. Believe it. This one's even higher than the movie it's loosely based off of, and that is quite the rarity.




Speaking of the movie, there's very little connection between it, the comic, and the game besides the basic setup-- Scott Pilgrim, lazy Canadian gamer extraordinaire, is dating the stunning, slightly emotional Ramona Flowers. Problem is, Ramona's seven Ex-boyfriends are out to pound Pilgrim and slash the relationship like a dojo board. Cue seven levels of facet-scrolling, beat-em-up gameplay playing as Scott, Ramona, and fellow Sex Bomb-Omb band members Kim Pine and Stephen Stills. The story is easy and never gets within the approach as you beat down the hoards of Toronto, making your manner to the stage's end and an Ex-boyfriend waiting to rock you. All in the name of love, of course.




Gameplay is terribly harking back to the classic beat-em-ups from Capcom and Sega, however because of some light RPG components, a slew of unlockable moves that are literally useful, and four player co-op (no friendly fireplace!), the simple brawling gameplay feels polished up to trendy standards. There are masses of weapons to seek out and use, plenty of objects to throw at enemies, and masses of humor to keep you chuckling. Try to cover a smile as you beat up paparazzi, throw teammates at innocent fans, and trash a movie set (or 5), I dare you.




Not only does Scott Pilgrim apprehend a way to throw a punch, he conjointly knows how to appear the part. Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World boasts one among the foremost impressive eight-bit art styles I've ever witnessed. The environments are colourful, animated, and stuffed with smooth parallax scrolling. You may conjointly be astounded by the number of detail packed into this 8-bit style. Artist Paul Robertson has done some absolutely phenomenal work creating the arenas and streets of Scott Pilgrim look polished and retro, however even higher than his environments are his characters. Scott Pilgrim looks harmless and innocent, a true underdog, until he busts out his flaming dragon uppercut. Ramona appearance chibi, cute, and way more colorful than her movie counterpart. Kim and Stephen bring their own distinctive flavor to the cluster, and the numerous boss Ex's all look suitably menacing after a protracted, health-sucking trek through their stage. Even the generic thug characters look nice, often inciting humor as stereotypical geeks lose their mind and panic whereas enemy bandits gander about in sinister fashion. Maybe most spectacular of all are the character animations, that flow smoothly and impressively because the solid perform somewhat easy, nevertheless impressively choreographed combat moves. Scott Pilgrim never strays too way from the style and humor of its comic-book inspiration, however still manages to search out its own vogue as a seriously good-wanting eight-bit game. Scott Pilgrim will lightweight up your screen.




And while your screen is busy pushing those purty pixels, your speakers can be jumping to an electrifying original score from 8-bit band Anamanaguchi. The songs themselves seem capable of inspiring headaches when awhile, and the various tunes
eventually begin to sound a very little too similar, but overall the soundtrack fits in with the game's retro vibe and complements the action well. Besides the soundtrack, the sound effects pack a nice arcadey punch, and the shortage of voice
acting is in all probability a godsend.
Don't suppose this can be a walk in the park though, the game is quite difficult for the lone player. I took me around 5 tries to best the primary Ex, However, the sport provides a River City Ransom-like
power-up system that will provide even the solo gamers a fighting chance. It's also a fairly temporary expertise at around four or 5 hours. Have a say some four-player co-op and the sport get's a lot additional fun, a lot a lot of ridiculous, and sadly a heap shorter. Still, there are unlockable modes and characters, and taking part in through once more as the fairly distinct alternate characters is price the trouble, if simply to work out their awesome animations and special moves. At ten usd, you may be happy with the amount of game you get here, particularly when its of such high quality.
Final Comments




Scott Pilgrim is not a revolution of the brawling, beat-em-silly formula, but darn if it hasn't nearly perfected the genre. Ubisoft has done an amazing job making a responsive, deep, and replayable brawler that not solely harkens back to the
classics of old, but outdoes them. Paul Robertson knows the way to push a very, terribly pretty pixel, and the game will service to its comic-book roots whereas finding a cohesive and lovely eight-bit style of its own. The audio is fitting, and the sport will provide you adequate playtime to justify its modest ten-dollar price tag. Positive, online co-op would have been nice, but guess what else is nice--Scott Pilgrim Vs. The World: The Game. Bryan Lee O'Malley should be proud to possess such an exquisite title serving his precious very little license, and you'll undoubtedly be proud to possess this game.





Author: Leslie Donner

About the author:
Leslie Donner has been writing articles online for nearly 2 years now. Not only does this author specialize in Video Game Review - Scott Pilgrim Vs The World - The Game You can also check out his latest website about Vtech Cordlesss Phones


No comments:

Post a Comment