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86 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "I Think He's Talking About YOU, Bats!"
Batman: Arkham Asylum was a gaming masterpiece. There are probably not a whole lot of people out there that would argue that fact. However, there are probably a great deal of people out there wondering if they should get this if they already bought AA. Simply put.......no.

In a nutshell, the plot is simply "Joker takes over Arkham Asylum and releases all...
Published 20 months ago by SnS

versus
2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Didn't quite live up to the hype
That no game developer in the past few decades has made a superhero game with even half the technical polish of this one really inflated the reviews. This game looked great, but the gameplay and gadgets become repetitive. The voice acting was good, but the level design was poor. Overall, this isn't a bad buy for $20 or so.
Published 3 months ago by Joseph C. Stack


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86 of 88 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "I Think He's Talking About YOU, Bats!", May 14, 2010
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
Batman: Arkham Asylum was a gaming masterpiece. There are probably not a whole lot of people out there that would argue that fact. However, there are probably a great deal of people out there wondering if they should get this if they already bought AA. Simply put.......no.

In a nutshell, the plot is simply "Joker takes over Arkham Asylum and releases all sorts of baddies. Batman tries to stop him." The game hasn't changed much since it first came out and if you enjoyed AA almost a year ago, you can expect the exact same game this time around. Nothing has really been revamped, altered, or changed up. However, the biggest surprise for me was how well done the 3-D is. While the glasses are little more than cardboard blue and reds from the past, somehow Darkworks/TrioViz managed to avoid the tinting that those glasses used to give. It's still there a little bit, but at least the image isn't in blues, reds, and purples the whole time. You can actually notice various shades. Once your eyes relax, the image is clean and clear with very little in the realm of headaches or eyestrain. However, it doesn't hurt to pause or stop every once in a while, take off the glasses, and give your eyes a rest. Instead of being "popping" 3-D, it is more of a "passive" 3-D effect. To clarify: In so many 3-D experiences the image comes out at you as if it might hit you, this 3-D effect is more like the TV is simply a window and the depth starts from the screen's edge. Don't expect to try and dodge cheesy "in your face" moments. There is depth, but it far more subtle. For the gamers out there who wear glasses, fear not. The 3-D specs still fit over glasses, although I am sure it looks about as cool paisley polyester tracksuits. The passive 3-D has one big perk though, your friends can watch you play without the glasses and the 3-D "double exposure" look is minimal to non-existant. However, for all its style, it still feels gimmicky. Sure, it's cool, but I probably won't be playing through more than once with it turned on.

The extra challenge maps are nice, but since anyone can download them for an extra 7 bucks... Well, it doesn't really justify the price for older owners. For those unfamiliar, the extra maps are "Dem Bones" (Scarecrow Challenge maps) and "Crime Alley" (um....do I really need to explain that one?). The "Play as the Joker" maps are there as well. Pretty much everything you could have added over the last few months is there on one disk.

If you have been a holdout for Batman: Arkham Asylum, then this is well worth the price for the added 3-D and all challenge maps up to this point. You should be buying this immediately. For those people out there, this is a 5 star package. For anyone who already owns/owned Arkham Asylum, then this product should probably be passed up. Unless you feel like you MUST have the 3-D, spend the extra money and buy "Dem Bones" and "Crime Alley" off the PSN/XBL and save the rest for Batman Arkham Asylum 2.
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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Batman in 3D, what a blast!, June 8, 2010
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
I like Batman, but I am far from a big fan. With that being said, this is one of the best games I have played. The fact that it is in 3D makes it even better. The game combines many things that are familiar elements from other games. Some levels have a scary sensation like F.E.A.R offers. The fighting is similar to God of War. Stealth movement is like Splinter Cell. There are plenty of areas to explore. The graphics and voice work are amazing. But, let's get down to the basics:

Pros: Has a well organized upgrade system, easy to learn controls and Batman moves and reacts like a superhero should. You get to use a lot of Batman's gadgets which is cool.

Cons: In some levels, you will have to go back and forth a few times to accomplish a task. The Boss battles are pretty close to being the same (a batarang to the head and then pummel them).

Graphics: Great 5 of 5

Sound: Great 5 of 5

Controls: Good 4 of 5 (pretty smooth, but not perfect)

Story: Moderate 3 of 5 (good but not captivating unless you are a Batman fan)

I would still give this game overall a 5 of 5, because it was a lot of fun and the 3D effect made it so much cooler. It is probably the best Comic Book game out there. Let's face it, Marvel has a hard time making a game that gets over 3 of 5 stars in most reviews, which is hard for me to say as I am a huge Marvel fan. I would definitely recommend this game and I can not wait for the sequel.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Batman Simulator, November 30, 2010
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
On the few occasions Batman has had his own videogame, it's been a hard run for our hero. He doesn't have super-powers. It's hard to translate his detective skills into something that doesn't a) require the player to have the genius of Sherlock Holmes; or b) boil down to grabbing colored tokens and calling that "investigating". And of course the other obstacle Batman has to surmount is that balance between "Batman punches bad guy" and "Batman uses gadget on bad guy": you need good fight mechanics and useful gadgets that serve a purpose.

"Arkham Asylum" is the perfect marriage of the best things about Batman. It is also the perfect videogame for almost any audience. The fight mechanics make sense: they seldom leave you worrying more about being able to see than whether or not you're hitting the bad guy. There is a gameplay balance between the "quiet stealth" mechanic of a Splinter Cell or a Hitman game, versus the "weapons free" tactical assualt of a Rainbow Six. And best of all, every scenario can be handled more than one way: you can choose to sneak by a clump of henchmen, you can leap into the fray, or you can swing around Spider-Man style and torment them as you slowly take them down one by one. The only choke points in Arkham Asylum appear to be the boss battles, where you typically need to do one or more very specifc things in order to win. If you like RPGs, you'll be pleased to know that you can collect "experience" as you go and then spend it to get new upgrades to your armor, abilities, and gadgets.

Arkham Asylum is about as perfect as a game can get: it makes a complicated hero like Batman very easy to handle. It doesn't require fast-twitch skills, and yet there is plenty of action to be had. The controls are very fluid and despite lacking a platform-style "jump" mechanic, you are extremly agile and can easily chain combinations of moves together. For example, let's say you're on a ledge. You'd like to glide down, kick a bad guy, then grapple up to a gargoyle and swing across the room before he knows what hit him. You could do this by tapping square, then R1, then R1 again. If you knock somebody down and you'd like to finish them off, just hold R2 and press the triangle button: Batman will pounce on them, grapple, and subdue them with a knock-out punch and he'll even do it from some distance away so you don't have to sprint across the room before the bad guy gets to his feet.

Arkham Asylum also boasts a storyline written by Paul Dini, who is well known for the lion's share of the Batman Animated Series. Characters are voiced by the same people from the series, such as Mark Hamill as the Joker. There are all sorts of hidden goodies to find in every level, and each can unlock either the ongoing saga of Dr. Arkham or detailed information on the many DC characters that make up Batman's universe. Half of the fun is in listening to "patient interview tapes", reading origin stories and "first appearance" details, and exploring the "Behind the scenes" video content on the disc. You don't have to find everything that is hidden in this game, but the payoff makes you want to. Best of all, rather than worrying that you might miss out on a hidden secret, you are very clearly shown that some things won't be accessible until you come back later. Batman's gadgets come to him over the course of the game, and sometimes you'll need one that you'll be getting later in order to get into a secret area...you can always come back another time.

If games like this are typically hard for you, Easy difficulty does make it a cakewalk. Normal difficulty still gives you a lot of helping hands, though: if you get into a fatal situation such as falling off a ledge, the game will tell you 'tap R1 to escape' and give you a chance to avoid death. If you do die, you'll get a tip on the loading screen specific to what you were trying to get through. And if you're having trouble finding all the goodies, each section has a map that you can find that will light them up for you.

Still not impressed? Well, the Game of the Year Edition offers you the ability to play in "3D". This isn't the polarized "Avatar movie" style 3D, unfortunately: it is the traditional "red-blue glasses" 3D and comes with two pairs of folding paper 3D glasses. It works, it just doesn't bring much to the table. In levels with specific color balances such as the Arboretum (which has a lot of blues and greens), the colors tend to bleed out because you're looking through tinted lenses, so most of the time I leave this off. The Game of the Year Edition also adds 4 more maps, and the ability to "Play as the Joker". These extras really boost up the replayable appeal of Arkham Asylum. No matter what you're looking for in this game, you're going to find yourself coming back for more. You don't need to be a comic-book cognoscenti, but if you are you won't be disappointed.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Awesome for fans, June 1, 2010
= Fun:3.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
If you enjoyed Batman the animated series as a kid, you'll enjoy this game. kevin Conroy as Batman is great and Mark Hamill is fantastic. Overall the art direction is great, and the 3-d effect of this new game is pretty neat for a little while. Unfortunately the main thing I was looking foward to was the extra maps and they really arn't worth the extra amount for me, because they focus on the gameplay, and for me I was dissapointed in the pure gameplay.

I waited to get the GOTY edition b/c I was put-off by the demo being almost too easiy, and the full game is the same. I wish there was a feature to NOT have the exact buttons to push above peoples heads. I litteraly stopped after half an hour and restarted on hard in hopes it would be more challangeing, I have never EVER done that before. And I wish it were possible to have a setting so that the game didn't tell me exactly what to do within seconds, robbing me of the chance to actually figure anything out on my own: "I need to blow a hole in this wall". Maybe if I don't figure it out after 5 mintues but can you give me five seconds on my own before ou tell me exactly what to do Batman?

Fortuantely the Riddle puzzles provide plenty o' brain teasers in the puzzle-solving department. In genral there's alot of content in the box for this game, but for me the game really suffers from what I call "Assasin's Creed Syndrom" where it almsot plays itself. If you didn't notice what I'm talkign about in that game or find VGs are often frustrating when you don't know exactly what to do all the tiime, you'll probbly love this game, but if your like me and find that new games are constantly getting easier and treat you like your compeltely inept then this game will frustrate you at times.

However the story is great, art direction is splendid, voice-acting phenominal (though I wish they didn't taint it by making Kevin conroy say "maybe I can follow this trail" every five seconds) and the 3-d is fun... works very well with "detective mode" whcih your in ALL the time... following trails.

You can download the other map packs for free of the PSN with 3-d added which is a nice thing to do for peopel who purchase the GOTY, but as I said before the additional content is not appealing for very long (for me) because it's mostly just battle arena and/or time trails which where not what I even liked about this game in the first place.

If you like Batman this can be a great little game to pop in for a little bit before you get bored, but don't expect anything that will force you to strain yourself, or even leanfoward as you sit on the coach and coast through this one with those goofy (though the designs are cool) glasses on.

At 50 bucks it may be a bit over-priced for most people, but its definately worth picking up for Batman fans
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13 of 18 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars "Joker Asylum" does deliver 3D experience, May 23, 2010
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
This game is as good as it was when it first came out, is not going to be any other way, nothing is going to change that, what an amazing game this is, so there's no much to add when it comes to the game it self, the additional maps is a nice bonus and you will have fun playing them.

Now is the 3D worth it?, the answer is YES!, as I been saying TriOviz 3D is a great alternative and doesn't force you to change any equipment, I had no previous experience with this 3D option before this game, I had high hopes for it and it didn't let me down, I knew that the guys behind Batman Arkham Asylum wouldn't add and support a lame 3D feature to this great game.

Is a fact that there are diffences between this 3D option and the 3D option from 3D HDTVs but again it does deliver the 3D experience, it adds great depth, which by the way is the strongest point of this 3D option however it does offer some moments with pop'up images and depending on the angle you see something, things do have the feeling to come out from the screen, but not the way you would see in movie theaters though, not as close if you will, but again great 3D feature, like I read, this 3D option was applied to a finished game, apparently there can be more improvements/benefefits when taking it into consideration and applying it while the game is being developed, we will have to wait for more then, I also read that they do have many other projects yet to be announced for games and others things.

I'm looking forward to see more TriOviz 3D in games, movies, etc, this is not the old annoying analygraph 3D, though it might seem due to the glasses that come with the game, although they do have different glasses. You can check out their website for everything related to this tech: [...] , I had talked about this 3D alternative in a few discussions already and well for me, at this moment, this is the way to go as far as 3D is concerned, I am willing and of course I do want to go through the 3D transition, we all would like to have a 3D HDTV, who wouldn`t?, but for me I have to face the fact that I just cannot go and pick one up without putting a quite some weight to my finance situation right now, so no 3D set for me, at least not yet, another fact is that I am not willing to change my 37 inch 1080p Panasonic LCD HDTV just yet, I am quite happy with it.

I fully support this tech for they provide a great, simple and functional 3D solution, hopefully it will get more support from the games/films industry to have more options in 3D, and not trying to sell the idea that in order to get 3D you HAVE to change your equipment, yes 3D equipment is a must for many partnerships created between companies, but 3D it self can be given to consumers no matter what with options like this, yes I'm up for the change and moving forward but there should be a smoother for 3D, lets not forget that there are people who don`t even have a regular HDTV, people in other countries who don`t have access to the latest technology, this is a great tech for that, and like they advertise on their website you can get 3D in a world dominated by 2D equipment.

Now, lets not forget that 3D will not make a game, movie or TV show good or better for that matter, Batman Arkham Asylum is still the same 5 out 5 stars amazing game in 2D or 3D.

3D is an option that I do appreciate for some movies, more suitable for games I would say but at the end is also way to get more money from us willing to pay more for it in this 3D momentum, 3D improves nothing but feeling when things move or interact in space, but that`s the whole point right!, I do like having the option but is not like "things won't be the same" if I don't have 3D availability or that I going to disregard a movie or a game if it doesn't have 3D in it.

...just for the record I talked more about 3D than the game it self because as I mentioned the game is still the same great game, 3D would be the reason to take into consideration for Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year, otherwise get regular release of the game and save the difference for any other game or for Batman Arkham Asylum 2, on the other hand if you are a Batman fan and loved Batman Arkham Asylum, in that case the Game of the Year edition is probably a must, the 3D adds great value to it.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Batman In The Gotham City Madhouse, December 10, 2011
By 
Barry Berlin (Las Vegas, Nevada) - See all my reviews
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
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This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Edition is one of the greatest video games I have ever played. I am the rarest of gamers, a 63 year old who has been gaming on computers and consoles since the late 1970s. This game in the PS3 version is the best translation of a comic book hero into reality I've ever seen or heard of. If you want to get inside the mind of Batman and fight notorious villains and their henchmen without compromising any aspect of the characters, this is a game you must have. The GOTY edition allows you to play as the Joker, (main criminal adversary of the game), and comes with extra maps and challenges. There are puzzles which are solvable by people with average intelligence and if you need help solving the puzzle aspects of the game you can always find solutions somewhere on the web and plenty of walkthroughs are available on You Tube. The fighting is fast and calls for the cunning of a supreme crime fighter as you have so many weapons and "wonderful toys" to fight with. The game is enormous and encompasses all of Arkham Asylum as well as Arkham Island. You will be playing this one for a long time as it is just full of things to do and they are all fun. This game is considered one of the all time PS3 hits and is likely to remain as such for as long as there is a PS3. If you are considering purchasing Batman Arkham City, which is the sequel to this game, make sure you have played this one first. This game comes with all of the downloadable content which Arkham City has already started selling. So for about $20 you will get a game which cost $59.95 when it was released plus about $30 in downloadable content for free. When you finish playing Arkham Asylum, you can buy Arkham City for a lot less than it costs now. Buy this game, put it on your big screen, and enjoy yourself in the insane asylum.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A true "Batman simulator", April 19, 2011
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars 
This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
Arkham Asylum borrows elements and ideas from a number of different Batman periods, storywriters, and graphic novels to create what is, to date, the best simulation of what it is actually like to be Batman.

The story draws heavily from the graphic novel Arkham Asylum: A Serious House on Serious Earth, a story in which the inmates literally wind up running the asylum and draw Batman into a cat and mouse game that brings out the truth behind why Arkham was created and its horrible history.

While the game doesn't delve into the deepest and darkest parts of the novel, it is gritty, violent, and a true throwback to the 1980s Batman comics and an homage to the grittier, less stable Batman of the new Christopher Nolan era. Truly, what makes this game great is the overall atmosphere. Batman is confident and powerful, but he's surrounded by a decaying Arkham full of truly insane people. It starts out bad enough when the Joker and his freed henchman, mostly transfers from Blackgate, run through the Asylum killing guards and taking hostages, but the game really comes into its own when you invest your time in solving the hidden Riddler puzzles. Backstories of the inmates are filled in via interview tapes, but the real "treat" is the increasingly twisted and chilling history of the Asylum and its founder Amadeus Arkham that you can unlock as you progress.

The gameplay is also interesting, but the story and atmosphere are the real fun here because, aside from a few particularly tricky encounters, the story mode portion of the game is pretty easy. On normal difficulty I rolled through the game in a three-day weekend and in less than a week without playing every day I had 100% of the Riddler puzzles solved to boot, as well as 2/3 of the achievements unlocked. Hard mode is substantially more difficult, but even that's not terribly tough in most spots.

You spend your time variously solving puzzles, sneaking around disabling bad guys, and simply getting into fist fights and pummeling them into submission. You can use your grapple to gain a vantage point, sneak through ducts in the floor and walls, or leverage your vast array of gizmos, including explosive gel, a code breaker and, of course, your trusty batarang (and it's variations) to take down the baddies. On the way you'll encounter a few bosses that are pathetically easy (virtually all require little more than dodging big attacks and then retaliating against a stunned opponent) and you'll even encounter a few sideshows thanks to the Scarecrow and his fear gas. The scarecrow portions look nice and create even more excellent atmosphere, but, ultimately, they're nothing but annoying jumping puzzles and feel a little out of place, although I think I'm in the minority on that opinion as most players seem to enjoy them.

Once you beat the story mode and find the various solutions to Riddler puzzles you unlock awards, most importantly the Challenges. The Challenges are just what they say they are, a series of challenges in which you are given a room of bad guys and several goals you must meet to beat the challenge. There are two types of challenges, combat and predator. In the latter you sneak through a room silently dispatching the baddies in three different, specific ways. For example, some challenges require you to blow up a wall to knock out one or more bad guys. Others require you to use moves such as silent takedowns, pull enemies over a ledge, or pop out of hiding and take them down. Do all three and you win the challenge (with a secondary goal of doing them as fast as possible).

The combat challenges are a little more annoying and a definite weak point for the game. In the combat challenges, you're just given a room full of bad guys and told to pummel them into submission. You rack up points by building bigger and bigger combos. More varied combos earn more points and if you perform "takedowns" - moves that instantly knock an inmate out - when you have a very high combo count you earn very large numbers of points.

Unfortunately, the combat challenges are about 20% skill and 80% dumb luck. If you have good rhythm you can do well by leaping from one inmate to another without missing a hit, but sometimes the inmates do stupid things that don't make sense and leave you unable to continue a combo. I've lost huge combos because inmates stood facing a brick wall behind a pillar for no apparently reason, because Batman just didn't feel like jumping across the room this time (no matter how often he's done it before) or because an inmate five feet away somehow managed to punch me in the back of the head as I was going toward another inmate. Ultimately, I completed nearly all of the game before having enough of the more absurd combat challenges and quitting with two of them completely unfinished and one medal (out of three) short on two others.

Still, overall the game is fun and worthwhile. It's short, the story mode is too easy, the combat challenges are too frustrating, but the atmosphere and story just make you feel what it's really like to BE Batman, and that's worth the money to any fan out there.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Batman 3D Asylum!, May 30, 2010
By 
Rick "Joe Kerr" (Frostburg, MD USA) - See all my reviews
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
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This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
Oh My God!!!! I cant decide what is best about this game! Either the fact that you ARE Batman and do everything he is capable of doing, or the spectacular 3D appearance! First of all the 3D isn't the pop out at you 3D that the latest movies have been, it is "layered" 3D I guess you would call it. If you stand still (don't move Batman) and look at the screen you clearly see Batman is emerging from the screen, everything in the foreground is emerging as well. You cant really tell it when it comes to the cut scenes but it is very great and just pure awesomeness when it comes to the game play! I do recommend playing the game from a distance because to me it looks better and plus it does strain on the eyes after a while and the best part is, after a short duration, you forget that you're wearing the glasses... The game in general 5/5 the 3D 5/5! Game of the year, hell! Game of the decade!!!
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Amazing game, even now!, December 3, 2011
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars 
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This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
I bought Batman Arkham City at Wal-Mart, which meant it came with a free version of Batman Arkham Asylum, I was pretty pumped up about that. Well, I played Arkham Asylum first, it was a blast. There was so much you could do on the game, good amount of side stuff you could do and the storyline was excellent.

I thought it lived up the hype and then some. I had always wanted to play this game, but I was unsure if I wanted to shell out the money for it, definitely a game you should play.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A fine stealth/action game, and a new high for comic book video games, August 19, 2011
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= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars 
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This review is from: Batman Arkham Asylum: Game of the Year Greatest Hits (Video Game)
The lack of good video games based on comic books has always been an enigma to me. Comic books, with their rich variety of characters and imaginative worlds, would on paper seem like fertile ground for video game developers to really create something special within the genre, but this has never really been the case. With the exception of a few classics like the X-Men Arcade game, Spiderman 2 on the PS2 and a handful of others, a comic book video game usually implies an uninspired, clichéd exercise that has been done better countless times before by developers working with original IP (intellectual property), especially in recent years with the boom of comic book movies that have been cash cows at movie theaters. But Batman: Arkham Asylum changes this for the current generation of consoles, delivering an extremely fun and wonderfully presented stealth/action title that puts gameplay first.

Batman: Arkham Asylum delivers in making the player really feel like he/she is stepping into the shoes of the Dark Knight. The fisticuff-centric action gameplay is the finest non-shooting action I've experienced in any action game on this generation of consoles. Significantly more deep and complex than the button-mashing of so many other games, the combat is combo driven and requires precise timing and analog stick navigation. Successful combat rewards the player with not only points that can be used to upgrade gadgets/armor/abilities, but with beautiful action sequences that almost seem to be choreographed. Added to the mix is a fantastic stealth mechanic that lets Batman sneak up on foes, drop in from above, or pop up from below. Some of the most enjoyable parts of the game for me were when I would stalk my foes and pick them off one by one, watching them panic in despair, until there were none left. The game mixes stealth and action perfectly, making it an absolute joy to play. For those of you gamers who are a bit more old-school, Batman: Arkham Asylum feels like the proper follow up to the classic Playstation title Tenchu: Stealth Assassins, a great, innovative stealth game that was followed up by a series of subpar sequels that never captured the magic of the original game.

I also cannot neglect to mention the incredible "nightmare" sections of the game that were initiated when Batman makes contact with the Scarecrow. These were tense and terrifying parts of the game that played, looked, and felt completey distinct from all the other parts of the game. Kudos to the developers on this feat!

Batman: Arkham Asylum is a big budget game with high production values. And sometimes, unfortunately, with this AAA status and the immense popularity of a figure such as Batman, games such as this are at times made to cater to as large of an audience as possible, and in doing this, the game can suffer. In Batman: Arkham Asylum's case, there is one such weakness to the game, and that is its overall simplicity. Yes, the game is quite easy (I played it in Normal mode), and none of the bosses were challenging enough where they couldn't be defeated in 2 or 3 attempts. But the simplicity went a bit beyond just difficulty level. No matter what part of the game you are on, if you die, the game actually tells you how to progress during the loading screen! No trial and error, nor any experimentation, is needed....the game just gives you the answer. Most disappointing was the game's Detective Mode, an alternate view on your surroundings that allows Batman to see through walls and analyze any clues in the vicinity. This mode was EXTREMELY overpowered. It not only made the game even easier than it already was, but it took the whole "detective" element that Batman is so well known for completely out of the game's story mode. There was no need to investigate or search for clues to progress the game's story...just go into detective mode, and mystery solved. The only drawback against playing the entire game in detective mode is that you won't be able to appreciate the game's beautiful graphics.

The game does offer an side quest/exploration element that encourages you seek out items and puzzles left by the Riddler, which in turn unlock new segments in the game's Challenge Mode, but this will either be seen as a extra bonus of riches, or as a tedious distraction that is not worth the time, depending on the individual gamer. Either way, the option is there, and it is a nice touch by the developers to generously add extra content to the main game's 8-10 hour campaign/story mode.

Overall, Batman: Arkham Asylum is arguably the finest comic book video game ever made. Its competition may not be the strongest, but it is a testament to the passion of the developers for the Batman legacy, and a positive sign for the industry overall that excellent video games can still be developed from the deep mines of comic book lore. Arkham Asylum does have its flaws, but these are flaws that can be very easily addressed and fixed up for the game's next installment. All the foundations are here to create a brilliant and important series of video games that will bring the Dark Knight to life like no other medium on earth can do.
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