Game play shark tale
Customer Reviews. PlayStation 3. Quick View. Xbox Joshua Hall. Better than Vintage Stock. Erik Wingert. Shareef Haddad. Retro fun for me!! Douglas Hendrix. Hot Wheels: Beat That! Juan Alvarado. David Williams. OG Xbox. Christopher Hernandez. My disc. Rory Wooden. Just wondering does the PS3 play discs?
Rocky Giles. All purchase values and expectations were satisfactory. This section, thankfully, is a bit more interactive than the initial race. You need to dart back and forth across the screen saving lava lamps and various knick-knacks before they shatter on the ocean floor. It's fun, short and not too challenging. One of the most hyped aspects of the game involves Dance Dance Revolution style dance numbers.
The first of which comes early in the game, where Oscar busts out with an impromptu dance while being interviewed by Katy Current Ha! Arrows float by in a circular pattern around Oscar, and you're rewarded with a specific number of stars depending on your timing. Each dance level progresses through various stages, each slightly more difficult than the last. More than anything though, these sequences just drag on and on. They're good fun when delivered in three minute chunks, but anything more gets old fast.
Of course, it's pretty damn funny watching a fish turn his fins into makeshift parachute pants. The racing sequences dish out quite a bit of fun. Unlike the first race, where player interaction is restricted to occasional taps on the old controller, later races offer more interaction. You'll need to throttle past fish commuters, dodge transports and traffic and even ride super-fast currents through the bowels of Reef City.
While they won't pry speed junkies away from Burnout 3 , these watery races still manage to get your blood pumping. You'll spend the bulk of your time in Shark Tale playing through the Adventure stages. These stages take on different forms. The first as mentioned above sees you saving furniture. Other levels have you swim around Reef City hunting for specific items, all while dodging pesky crabs, angry puffer fish, jelly fish and other obstacles.
In an interesting move, you can swim into almost any house in Reef City to feed on other fishes' table scraps to restore your health. This makes adventuring quite easy, since each meal restores a large portion of your health.
Adventure mode even features stealth missions. You'll need to swim behind barrels, crates and other obstructions to keep from getting caught. Unfortunately, it's next to impossible to get caught. Security fish or sharks will spot you as you make your way from barrel to barrel, but won't come investigating. They'll just shout "Hey, there's Oscar" and forget they saw you if you duck behind a barrel.
Metal Gear it is not. Verdict Shark Tale escapes the fate of most big-license games. It offers plenty of fun through various different game play styles and retains the hip style of the movie. Being a kid game, it lacks the depth and difficulty needed by the average gamer. When a mini-games is completed, you are treated to a cut scene that unfolds the plot so there is some incentive to finish the mini-games. The graphics are actually well done and do a good job of mimicking the animation from the movie while the audio offers some nice soundtracks and voice-overs.
Really, if Shark Tale stumbled here this whole game would have fallen apart as the gameplay by itself just isn't strong enough to keep this game afloat. Shark Tale puts forth a reasonable effort but don't expect much from the gameplay. The mini-games are generally shallow but still somewhat entertaining. Shark Tale would probably make a decent rental and only huge fans of the movie will be satisfied with a purchase.
DreamWorks most recent animated blockbuster has made it to the PC. In your role as Oscar , you'll take to the 'streets'? This title features a plot directly from the movie interspersed with action, task-driven scenarios and a little Dance Dance Revolution thrown in for good measure. But all in all, is Shark Tale a fun, intriguing blend of action and adventure, or just another blah PC game trying to ride the coattails of the movie's popularity.
Controlling Oscar is an exercise in simplicity, as you can move almost completely with mouse controls. Though Reef City can be a bit confusing at first entry, the simple interface makes getting around town and interacting with the environment quite simple. Graphics are quite good for this style of game, and look very similar to the characters from the film.
The soundtrack is, of course, urban, but with a not-so-subtle 90's feel from time to time, and isn't actually as bad as I first expected. There's a lot not to like, though. As with all games of this variety, i. You know what's going to happen. It's also excruciatingly simple to play and complete. Twenty minutes into the game and I'd already cleared the first two areas and had filled up both my apartment and penthouse with goods.
And let's not spend any time getting into my opinion of the voice acting: if the dialogue from the film was this bad, I don't know if I could handle it. All in all, Shark Tale is just another mediocre film knock off of a game, one good for only about an hour or two of light, mindless fun.
While somewhat entertaining for a younger crowd and fans of the film, even the most casual older gamers might want to pass this one up. Shark Tale is a strange amalgamation. It has fighting, racing, questing and dancing.
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