Despite plenty of jaggies and rough edges, the overall graphical feel is clean and simple. Each of Phantom's segments are also beautifully illustrated with cinematic cut-scenes that'll literally take your breath away. With brilliant explosions and fantastic lighting effects (especially in the lightsaber battles), the graphics, though not superior, do hold their own against games such as Metal Gear Solid and Syphon Filter. You escape, meet Jar Jar Binks, deal with the Gungans, rescue the Queen, travel to Tatooine, find Anakin Skywalker, batde Darth Maul in the desert, return to Coruscant, and end up back in Theed-where you eventually face Darth Maul in the final battle.
BATTLE FOR NABOO ROM WONT WORK MOVIE
Guilty as Cin(ema)īeginning on the Trade Federation ship, the game progresses much as the movie does. This isn't Jedi Knight, and that's ever so apparent when you have to trade a pair of binoculars to take a city tour on Coruscant in order to get to the Senate. The excessive verbal fencing will cause some players (mainly non-StorWors fans) to put the controller down and head back to the theater for another fix, which is unfortunate. You have to barter with a variety of beings just to accomplish simple tasks, so the action slows down in areas. Mixed in with all the fast-paced action is a lot of talking. As the Queen (actually, Padm6, the disguised Queen), you'll fight through the last level of the game to reach the throne room and thwart the viceroy's amazingly wicked plans. As Panaka, you'll find a variety of weapons like blasters, thermal detonators, rocket launchers, and more to blast through the Federation's defenses, making quick work of enemy tanks, droids, and assorted henchmen. Otherwise, you're in for a pretty solid action game involving lots of lightsaber slashing, item-to-item bartering, and good-old-fashioned blow-things-to-pieces fun.Īs Obi-Wan and Qui-Gon, you'll swing the saber in a variety of ways and use the Force Push, which knocks enemies down and triggers switches that are just out of reach. If you haven't seen the movie yet, don't play-all the film's plot points are revealed.
You play as Obi-Wan Kenobi, Qui-Gon Jinn, Captain Panaka, and Queen Amidala as you race against time to save Theed, reach the Senate, and bring a new Jedi named Anakin on board.
What the Phantom Menace adventure game does for true fans is re-create the movie experience, making it completely interactive. If you hate Star Wars, however, you may want to stop reading now. And if you're someone who can't find anything else of interest in the action/adventure genre on the PlayStation, you'll feel the Force. If you're a fan of Star Wars, it was well worth the wait. You've seen the movie, lived through the hype, and probably had just about enough of Star Wars this summer-but you haven't played the adventure game for the PlayStation based on Star Wars Episode I: The Phantom Menace. After all, you know what happens at the end. If you battle on, it follows the movie in a satisfactory manner, but it inconveniences you so often that you might give up halfway through. Throw in some overly sensitive controls that make the 'platform game' bits unnecessarily challenging and you have something akin to Jar-Jar on the annoy-o-meter. It makes sense, but the way the game guides you.it feels very clumsy. You know you have to find Anakin in Mos Espa, but if you haven't had the right chat with the right person, he doesn't appear. Speaking of those sequences, the fact that key gameplay points are fixed to conversation set-pieces is irritating too. You can never see very far in front of you, and there is nothing on screen to give you any sense of direction.something that's especially annoying in the less action-oriented 'adventure' sequences. First, there's the sort of top-down view, something that makes you feel like you're wandering around looking at your feet all the time. Sure, The Phantom Menace has some gorgeous graphics, awesome sound.and even a copy of the music video included on the disc (if a little grainy), but it suffers from numerous tiny niggles that ruin it. It's always particularly disappointing when a Star Wars game fails to meet the standards that you think it should.