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Gameplay varies considerably from the original game. While your goal is to still to shoot and survive, there are now six worlds and 30 levels to conquer. Retro gaming purists may scoff at the colorful new environments, which have replaced the generic black background of the original game. However, the 3-D game design now allows for dangerous enemies to creep up from any angle (which they often do). Fortunately, the controls have also been updated to allow you to strategically jump over approaching enemies. --Brett Atwood
Pros:
This time around, the game has a plotline. You're Wally, a simpleton bean counter who's somehow chosen to pilot the Wee people's last hope, The Shooter, against the QueenPede and her countless brood. In five different worlds, you fly about, shooting bugs, creating mushrooms, defending villages, and rescuing your fellow Wee people from the clutches of the vile centipedes. You've got better tricks at your disposal, as you'll be able to upgrade your main cannon, fire secondary weapons, and use shields. However, the game is pretty much the same. You turn countless centipedes into mushrooms, blast spiders, and avoid touching anything dangerous.
The control of this game takes a little getting used to, but once you're there, you'll enjoy it. Instead of being limited to the bottom third of the screen, you can now roam about the entire 3D environment. Thankfully, the game engine was well designed, making strafing easy, so you can literally fly circles around your enemies. And although the centipedes enter from one side of the screen, they'll always make their way towards you. So if you find yourself running out of space, simply reverse your direction, and voila - more room. You'll learn to use this to your advantage, steering the centipedes toward wherever you need them to go. In addition, The Shooter can jump, so you can hop mushrooms or even climb ledges for special power-ups.
The graphics in this game are adequate. The game sports three different views: a top-down view, an up-close-and-personal view from directly behind your craft, and a hybrid middle ground. From the top-down view, things are simple and fairly bland. The graphics really come into their own when you switch to the close-up view, where the 'pedes start to look menacing and dangerous, houses look like more than just squares, and the Wees you rescue look much more alive. Everything takes on a cartoony look in this view, as the enemies have huge balloon eyes, the mushrooms pop out of the ground when you shoot the centipedes, and the Wee people look very elfish. The worlds all have their distinct look and are well designed - if it weren't for the mind-numbing repetition, they'd stand out better.
Think of a generic techno beat, and you've got the soundtrack to this game. While it's not really intrusive, it's nothing you'll turn up the volume to hear. The sound effects are carried over from the original and help the nostalgic effect this game is trying so hard to achieve.
Bundled into the package is an arcade mode, which presents you with a port of the original game. Unfortunately, the transition again falls short of the original, with even worse graphics and a low frame rate. While people unfamiliar with the original might enjoy playing this mode, gamers looking to Centipede for an authentic, arcade-perfect experience will be sorely disappointed.
What developers don't realize is that nostalgic gamers who still play classic arcade games play them because they enjoy the experience of playing with vector graphics with a simple control scheme and substandard sound. It's truly difficult to compare games of yesterday with games of today, as almost everything has changed technologically. It feels as if Centipede is trying so hard to recapture the magic of the original, by latching onto itself to extinct gameplay, that it pulls what could have been a great 3D shooter into the hollow of mediocrity. --Ben Stahl
--Copyright ©1999 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of GameSpot is prohibited. GameSpot and the GameSpot logo are trademarks of GameSpot Inc.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Centipede gets a 32-bit facelift,
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars = Fun:3.0 out of 5 stars = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Centipede (Video Game)
There is no doubt that the original Centipede is one of the most insanely addictive arcade games ever designed. The Playstation release of Centipede includes the classic game plus a newly updated 3D version. The new version of the game is interesting, allowing you to move anywhere on the playfield as you blast away at centipedes and mushrooms. Although I love the classic game, the new version just didn't hold my interest for very long. Having said that, because of the simple objectives involved, I do think this game might be enjoyed by younger and more casual game players. Incidentally, the classic version of Centipede in this package plays brilliantly with the Dual Shock controller. All in all, a good but not great effort.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
quick draw,
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars = Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Centipede (Video Game)
challenging, fast paced game remake of the origional. Suprising, twists and turns of the bugs that you battle. The only drawback is that you can't save progress after every sub level.
4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars
The Greatest Disappointment of all Time,
By "lostx" (Secret Lair under the Earth) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Centipede (Video Game)
The old classic arcade game Centipede; truly one of the greatest games in video game history. When I heard of the Playstation title coming, I immediatley had to buy a copy of it. As soon as I got my hands on it, for a very low price, it was the first thing I did when I got home, only to play the greatest disappointment I have ever seen. As my eyes met the screen, I viewed the most boring ... color-textures I have ever seen in a video game. A dorky little 7 year old, with way too large glasses and freaky haircut, who was the chosen one to rid the world of the centipedes. Not much of a storyline; it was more amusing to play Centipede without a story in the arcade. And like I said, the graphics were terrible. All was blocky, untextured and really showed proof that it was carelessly animated by a group of amateurs. Getting past the horrible graphics and boring storyline, lets move on to the term they call 'sound' in the game. It has to be a cold day in hell when squeaky, toneless, flarvorless bits of crunchy tunes and smushed talking has to be looked at as sound. Besides the crunched up sound, the boring gameplay consists of rescuing tiny pipsqueaks and 'protecting' their houses from the jumping spiders (which also look and sound incredibly [weak]). Parts of the game also consist of driving around aimlessly, so do yourself and your money a favor...don't waste a penny on this game.
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