Sun, Oct 17, 2004 - Page 19 News List

Game Reviews

By Gavin Phipps  /  STAFF REPORTER

Platform: PC, X-Box and PS2

Taiwan release: already available

Featuring oodles of high-speed action and a host of characters, vehicles and locations from all five of the Star Wars movies, Lucas Arts' long-awaited addition to its long line of console/PC Star Wars themed games, Star Wars: Battlefront is a must for both fans of the films as well as those who enjoy fast-paced first-person shooter and team-based games.

Graphically brilliant, visually stunning and a joy to play, the game's only drawback is its learning curve. Once this is mastered, however, it enables a player to whip through the scenarios with ease.

Players can choose to be one of five classes of foot soldier from each of the series' five factions and do battle in three modes of play on 16 maps. Along with the vast array of foot soldiers, vehicles also play a big role in Battlefront. From nimble X-wing and TIE fighters to landspeeders and Tauntauns and fearsome AT-STs, the game features just about every Star Wars vehicle ever dreamed up.

What really makes Battlefront such a great game is its "Historical Campaign" mode, which allows players to follow the story lines and re-fight all of the action in the same order that it appeared in all five of the movies. Interspersed with film footage and voice-overs, this package will have true Star Wars buffs transfixed to their consoles/PCs for a very long time.

Game play is enhanced by the inclusion of John Williams' theme music. Crank the volume to the max and allow the Force to be with you as you take this excellent Star Wars game to previously unobtainable levels of playability.

Shellshock: Nam'67

Publisher: Edios Interactive

Platform: PC, X-Box and PS2

Taiwan release: November

Over the past year, Vietnam War-themed console/PC games have become almost as prominent as those set against the backdrop of World War II.

Touted as the most realistic Vietnam War-themed shooter on the market, Shellshock: Nam '67 sets out to provide gamers with a disturbing degree of realism.

Sadly, the level of realism Edios was hoping to create does not translate into the actual game-play mode. What the hype boils down to instead is plenty of foul language, photographs of semi-nude Vietnamese prostitutes, and some pretty gory cut scenes -- the nastiest of which depicts the mutilation of a prostitute by a grunt with an enormous hunting knife. As far as actual game play goes, Nam 67 is little less than basic and at times annoying.

The aim of the game is to take your character from being a green grunt to becoming a hardened Special Forces operative. For nearly all of the game's 13 missions, your character is accompanied by a squad of grunts -- several of whom die horrendous deaths as part of the cut scenes.

The objective of these missions involves destroying equipment or fending off wave after wave of NVA attacks. Needless to say, violent firefights that see large numbers of enemy combatants charging at you while screaming at the tops of their lungs, are the crux of the game.

You can visit a prostitute (the actual sex scenes are not part of the realism and don't appear on the screen), speak frankly with your squad members and kill "Charlie" like there's no tomorrow, but Shellshock: Nam '67 lacks substance, entertains for an hour at most and will not have players eagerly awaiting another tour of duty in the jungles of Edios's Vietnam.

This story has been viewed 2695 times.
TOP top