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Tag: X-Men: The Official Game

Summary: X-Men: The Official Game

by admin on Mar.13, 2010, under Summary

An official bridge between the events of the two films, X2: X-Men United and X3: The Last Stand, X-Men: The Official Game follows main characters Wolverine, Nightcrawler, and Iceman as they embark on a 28-mission journey to defeat Hydra, the Brotherhood, and a collection of other surprise villains. Features include character-specific level geometry and super-powers, voice-overs from select members of the motion picture cast, and an original narrative written by Chris Claremont and Zak Penn.

Genre: Third-Person Action

Publisher: Activision

Developer: Z-Axis

Online Play:

Local Play:

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X-Men: The Official Game

by admin on Feb.02, 2010, under Review

May 22, 2006
“I hope the movie is better than this…” was one of the few key phrases that kept cycling through my head as I played along with Activision’s terribly under-realized plot bridge, X-Men: The Official Game. It’s the epitome of wasted potential and had me wondering aloud such other popular axioms as, “Man, this game is easy! Is that really the only thing my guy can do?” and “What’s up with this dummy AI?”

Developed by Z-Axis (a very talented crew that brought us the excellent extreme classics, Aggressive Inline and Thrasher: Skate and Destroy), X-Men lacks the polish and depth that the crew’s previous software has always had. At its best, this film prequel is a limited and straightforward beat ‘em up that benefits from a touch of sky surfing and a smaller dose of smoke and mirrors. It’s a hard pill to swallow to say the least, and especially so when coming off the memories of the addictive X-Men Legends franchise and Z-Axis’ past history.

To its credit, X-Men: The Official Game does try to mix it up. The three playable characters are certainly different in how they operate and none of the three feel like carbon copies of each other. Wolverine, for example, is your basic scrapper complete with quick attacks, heavy blows, and a fury mode, while the teenaged Iceman is a blown-up surfer — a guy that soars through the air on a pathway of ice who can also fire various kinds of frozen projectiles at enemies. The most entertaining character to use, however, is “the Amazing Nightcrawler”. A highly-acrobatic weirdo that can “Bamph” from one point to another (aka teleport), the little blue devil offers a nice mix of quick fisticuffs, limited platforming, and speedy twitch challenges.

But the problem with these guys isn’t their diversity from one another; it’s their diversity of options within their own arsenal. The hairy badass Logan, for instance, never really offers anything beyond a few easily repeatable combos and he has actually taken a step backward from the abilities in 2003’s Wolverine’s Revenge. This kind of simplistic combat applies to Iceman as well. The young mister Drake can only shoot frozen beams or utilize a missile-like Hailstorm attack while occasionally needing to summon an ice shield for protection. That’s pretty much all these guys do — and it gets repetitive quickly.

Making things even worse is the fact that a broader move set isn’t even needed. Enemy AI is downright brainless and doesn’t offer much beyond a tendency to defend everything with little response on the hard difficulty setting. When opponents do attack, though, they usually follow the same one to three-hit combo that all their palette-swapped buddies do — making them easy targets for whatever punishment your mutant team wants to dish out.

It isn’t all bad, though, as there are a couple of cool moments that really make playing through X-Men more tolerable than the battle engine would lead you to believe. Nightcrawler in particular should have had a title of his own, as his ability to maneuver via teleportation to inaccessible areas makes the game’s otherwise boring and unimaginative level design interesting. The fact that Crawler can incorporate his teleports into combat as well makes his hand-to-hand confrontations the most fun too, and the fact that we learn his reason for not appearing in X3 is a nice, if not short, little surprise (the game is set between the last movie and the upcoming sequel due out next week, after all).

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X-Men: The Official Game

by admin on Feb.02, 2010, under Review

May 22, 2006
“I hope the movie is better than this…” was one of the few key phrases that kept cycling through my head as I played along with Activision’s terribly under-realized plot bridge, X-Men: The Official Game. It’s the epitome of wasted potential and had me wondering aloud such other popular axioms as, “Man, this game is easy! Is that really the only thing my guy can do?” and “What’s up with this dummy AI?”

Developed by Z-Axis (a very talented crew that brought us the excellent extreme classics, Aggressive Inline and Thrasher: Skate and Destroy), X-Men lacks the polish and depth that the crew’s previous software has always had. At its best, this film prequel is a limited and straightforward beat ‘em up that benefits from a touch of sky surfing and a smaller dose of smoke and mirrors. It’s a hard pill to swallow to say the least, and especially so when coming off the memories of the addictive X-Men Legends franchise and Z-Axis’ past history.

To its credit, X-Men: The Official Game does try to mix it up. The three playable characters are certainly different in how they operate and none of the three feel like carbon copies of each other. Wolverine, for example, is your basic scrapper complete with quick attacks, heavy blows, and a fury mode, while the teenaged Iceman is a blown-up surfer — a guy that soars through the air on a pathway of ice who can also fire various kinds of frozen projectiles at enemies. The most entertaining character to use, however, is “the Amazing Nightcrawler”. A highly-acrobatic weirdo that can “Bamph” from one point to another (aka teleport), the little blue devil offers a nice mix of quick fisticuffs, limited platforming, and speedy twitch challenges.

But the problem with these guys isn’t their diversity from one another; it’s their diversity of options within their own arsenal. The hairy badass Logan, for instance, never really offers anything beyond a few easily repeatable combos and he has actually taken a step backward from the abilities in 2003’s Wolverine’s Revenge. This kind of simplistic combat applies to Iceman as well. The young mister Drake can only shoot frozen beams or utilize a missile-like Hailstorm attack while occasionally needing to summon an ice shield for protection. That’s pretty much all these guys do — and it gets repetitive quickly.

Making things even worse is the fact that a broader move set isn’t even needed. Enemy AI is downright brainless and doesn’t offer much beyond a tendency to defend everything with little response on the hard difficulty setting. When opponents do attack, though, they usually follow the same one to three-hit combo that all their palette-swapped buddies do — making them easy targets for whatever punishment your mutant team wants to dish out.

It isn’t all bad, though, as there are a couple of cool moments that really make playing through X-Men more tolerable than the battle engine would lead you to believe. Nightcrawler in particular should have had a title of his own, as his ability to maneuver via teleportation to inaccessible areas makes the game’s otherwise boring and unimaginative level design interesting. The fact that Crawler can incorporate his teleports into combat as well makes his hand-to-hand confrontations the most fun too, and the fact that we learn his reason for not appearing in X3 is a nice, if not short, little surprise (the game is set between the last movie and the upcoming sequel due out next week, after all).

  • 1
  • 2
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Comments Off : more...

X-Men: The Official Game

by admin on Feb.02, 2010, under Review

May 22, 2006
“I hope the movie is better than this…” was one of the few key phrases that kept cycling through my head as I played along with Activision’s terribly under-realized plot bridge, X-Men: The Official Game. It’s the epitome of wasted potential and had me wondering aloud such other popular axioms as, “Man, this game is easy! Is that really the only thing my guy can do?” and “What’s up with this dummy AI?”

Developed by Z-Axis (a very talented crew that brought us the excellent extreme classics, Aggressive Inline and Thrasher: Skate and Destroy), X-Men lacks the polish and depth that the crew’s previous software has always had. At its best, this film prequel is a limited and straightforward beat ‘em up that benefits from a touch of sky surfing and a smaller dose of smoke and mirrors. It’s a hard pill to swallow to say the least, and especially so when coming off the memories of the addictive X-Men Legends franchise and Z-Axis’ past history.

To its credit, X-Men: The Official Game does try to mix it up. The three playable characters are certainly different in how they operate and none of the three feel like carbon copies of each other. Wolverine, for example, is your basic scrapper complete with quick attacks, heavy blows, and a fury mode, while the teenaged Iceman is a blown-up surfer — a guy that soars through the air on a pathway of ice who can also fire various kinds of frozen projectiles at enemies. The most entertaining character to use, however, is “the Amazing Nightcrawler”. A highly-acrobatic weirdo that can “Bamph” from one point to another (aka teleport), the little blue devil offers a nice mix of quick fisticuffs, limited platforming, and speedy twitch challenges.

But the problem with these guys isn’t their diversity from one another; it’s their diversity of options within their own arsenal. The hairy badass Logan, for instance, never really offers anything beyond a few easily repeatable combos and he has actually taken a step backward from the abilities in 2003’s Wolverine’s Revenge. This kind of simplistic combat applies to Iceman as well. The young mister Drake can only shoot frozen beams or utilize a missile-like Hailstorm attack while occasionally needing to summon an ice shield for protection. That’s pretty much all these guys do — and it gets repetitive quickly.

Making things even worse is the fact that a broader move set isn’t even needed. Enemy AI is downright brainless and doesn’t offer much beyond a tendency to defend everything with little response on the hard difficulty setting. When opponents do attack, though, they usually follow the same one to three-hit combo that all their palette-swapped buddies do — making them easy targets for whatever punishment your mutant team wants to dish out.

It isn’t all bad, though, as there are a couple of cool moments that really make playing through X-Men more tolerable than the battle engine would lead you to believe. Nightcrawler in particular should have had a title of his own, as his ability to maneuver via teleportation to inaccessible areas makes the game’s otherwise boring and unimaginative level design interesting. The fact that Crawler can incorporate his teleports into combat as well makes his hand-to-hand confrontations the most fun too, and the fact that we learn his reason for not appearing in X3 is a nice, if not short, little surprise (the game is set between the last movie and the upcoming sequel due out next week, after all).

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next
Comments Off : more...

X-Men: The Official Game

by admin on Feb.02, 2010, under Review

May 22, 2006
“I hope the movie is better than this…” was one of the few key phrases that kept cycling through my head as I played along with Activision’s terribly under-realized plot bridge, X-Men: The Official Game. It’s the epitome of wasted potential and had me wondering aloud such other popular axioms as, “Man, this game is easy! Is that really the only thing my guy can do?” and “What’s up with this dummy AI?”

Developed by Z-Axis (a very talented crew that brought us the excellent extreme classics, Aggressive Inline and Thrasher: Skate and Destroy), X-Men lacks the polish and depth that the crew’s previous software has always had. At its best, this film prequel is a limited and straightforward beat ‘em up that benefits from a touch of sky surfing and a smaller dose of smoke and mirrors. It’s a hard pill to swallow to say the least, and especially so when coming off the memories of the addictive X-Men Legends franchise and Z-Axis’ past history.

To its credit, X-Men: The Official Game does try to mix it up. The three playable characters are certainly different in how they operate and none of the three feel like carbon copies of each other. Wolverine, for example, is your basic scrapper complete with quick attacks, heavy blows, and a fury mode, while the teenaged Iceman is a blown-up surfer — a guy that soars through the air on a pathway of ice who can also fire various kinds of frozen projectiles at enemies. The most entertaining character to use, however, is “the Amazing Nightcrawler”. A highly-acrobatic weirdo that can “Bamph” from one point to another (aka teleport), the little blue devil offers a nice mix of quick fisticuffs, limited platforming, and speedy twitch challenges.

But the problem with these guys isn’t their diversity from one another; it’s their diversity of options within their own arsenal. The hairy badass Logan, for instance, never really offers anything beyond a few easily repeatable combos and he has actually taken a step backward from the abilities in 2003’s Wolverine’s Revenge. This kind of simplistic combat applies to Iceman as well. The young mister Drake can only shoot frozen beams or utilize a missile-like Hailstorm attack while occasionally needing to summon an ice shield for protection. That’s pretty much all these guys do — and it gets repetitive quickly.

Making things even worse is the fact that a broader move set isn’t even needed. Enemy AI is downright brainless and doesn’t offer much beyond a tendency to defend everything with little response on the hard difficulty setting. When opponents do attack, though, they usually follow the same one to three-hit combo that all their palette-swapped buddies do — making them easy targets for whatever punishment your mutant team wants to dish out.

It isn’t all bad, though, as there are a couple of cool moments that really make playing through X-Men more tolerable than the battle engine would lead you to believe. Nightcrawler in particular should have had a title of his own, as his ability to maneuver via teleportation to inaccessible areas makes the game’s otherwise boring and unimaginative level design interesting. The fact that Crawler can incorporate his teleports into combat as well makes his hand-to-hand confrontations the most fun too, and the fact that we learn his reason for not appearing in X3 is a nice, if not short, little surprise (the game is set between the last movie and the upcoming sequel due out next week, after all).

  • 1
  • 2
  • Next
Comments Off : more...

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