Posts tagged throwbacks
Review: Geometry Wars: Retro Evolved 2
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What? Geometry Wars is one of the top downloaded games on Xbox Live Arcade, and for good reason. This is a highly addictive game that has nothing to do with mathematics. It’s a throwback to 80s shootemups, and manages to be just as fun.
Why? Geometry Wars has this colorful modern game aesthetic, but keeps all the intrigue of the 80s arcade classic Asteroids. It also has an amazing soundtrack and great multiplayer modes (competitive and collaborative).
Who? It is a game that is easy to play, because it only requires you to use the Xbox’s two “joysticks” (so, no button pressing). This makes the game easy to play for young/old/new gamers, but mastering it is a feat that only the greatest gamers can achieve. Scalability is what separates good games from great games (easy to learn, difficult to master), and this IS a great game. Unfortunately, libraries won’t be able to add it to a loanable collection, because it is only available as a downloadable title for 360. This IS, however, THE game that every library with an Xbox 360 should download. There is a similar title, Geometry Wars: Galaxies, that is available for multiple gaming platforms. It is an inferior title, but still gets the basics of the fun game play and you can buy a physical copy for your school or library’s loanable collection.
Gameplay:
Remember Asteroids?
Review: WWE Legends of Wrestlemania
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What? Game publisher THQ has been doing WWE (formerly WWF) video games for over 10 years now. THQ’s WWF No Mercy (2000) for the N64 is considered by gaming fans to be the “ultimate” wrestling video game, and THQ has had a consistent hit with their annual best-selling Smackdown vs. Raw series of games. While Acclaim’s Legends of Wrestling series was a critical failure, the “throwback” aspect of the game managed to garner it sales not warranted by the quality or critical reception of the games. This was THQ’s chance to cash in on that market, and they succeeded in providing a game for throwback wrestling fans.
Why? This game lacks depth. And by depth, I mean that hardcore gamers will be able to finish this game in a few days (vs. THQ’s yearly Smackdown vs. Raw, which has months of replay value). But while most games that lack depth are not worth purchasing, this game makes up for it in both 80s/90s wrestling nostalgia and throwback arcade controls. This makes it a good choice for a library collection because it is a game with large pop-culture significance (Hulk Hogan!), it is a game that gamers might have been reluctant to buy but eager to play (which is the whole reason people rent books from libraries), and it has a small & fun learning curve that makes for a good times in multiplayer and library programming situations. This is also a responsible pick for a collection because it is “historical” in nature and isn’t part of a series of never-ending sequels, so its value to a collection won’t disappear.
Who? Gamers are wrestling fans, or, at least, gamers like wrestling games. It probably skews towards an older gaming demographic than the best-sellingĀ Smackdown series because its main “draw” is nostalgia. Don’t write off a younger crowd either, because Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson is currently starring in a big-budget movie with Julie Andrews and he also happens to grace the cover of the game. The game is for PS3 and XBox 360.
