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66 of 69 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Don't let this one slip through your fingers...,
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
This game is great! It is one of the best to be released for any system in quite some time. This game will be the standard by which all other action/adventure games will be judged for a long while. It has all the elements of a soaring adventure: action, drama, romance, and treachery.The developers of this game have really earned their paychecks and put a ton of time into this gem. The Prince has many acrobatic abilities to aid him on his quest to harness the sands of time. He can run on walls, vault over enemies, fight multiple opponents, and control time itself. Death in this game is not the end...simply reverse time and try again. Speaking of the moves and actions that the Prince can do...awesome!! The combat engine and interface are flawless and jaw droppingly smooth. Facing one opponent, move the analog stick back and press the square button to whip around and give the enemy sneaking up on you a good kick. Trapped by more enemies on all sides, vault over one and get yourself some breathing room. You can freeze enemies with the power of time, you can launch yourself off of wall for a more powerful attack, and you can even get a little help from Farrah, a mysterious woman also spared from the sands of time. The environments are beautiful and richly detailed. Tapestries move as you walk past, water ripples, and dust falls from the decaying walls of the huge palace that you find yourself trapped in. The palace is quite large and has many areas to explore, nooks and crannies to check out, and a few secret areas. The game is mosty a straightforward action/adventure quest with a few puzzles thrown in for good measure. Pulling levers, pushing blocks, swinging from walls and dodging traps are all skills that you will find yourself utilizing in dazzling combinations and myriad situations. The game is structured to provide a builing block system when it comes to controlling Prince. Moves are added one on top of another at appropriate times during the game so as to provide a good learning curve...before you know it you will be doing some pretty wild combo moves. This game is awesome! It is a solid addition to any library and a treat for the eyes as well. This game is as fun to watch as it is to play and everyone should own it. This game is what the "Tomb Raider" series should have been! I simply can't praise it enough! Go buy it and find out for yourself!
48 of 50 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The Thinking Man's Adventure game,
By sporkdude "sporkdude" (San Jose, Ca United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
Prince of Persia is just amazing. Prince of Persia is not a hack and slash game, it's not a fighting game, it's not even really a platform game. The best way to describe it is is as a adventure puzzle game, similar to Ico.Prince of Persia takes place in a huge palace, with many different levels. In fact, there are so many levels, progress is defined by percent, not level number. You control the Prince as he has to traverse the Palace. This palace is magnificent, and the atmosphere of the palace really shines. That alone is worth the price of the game. A lot of thought and artistic integrity was invested in this palace. The Prince has to go through this palace while fighting monsters, which are pretty easy, while jumping, crawling, swinging, or moving objects his way out. That's the beauty of it. The movements to the next levels are the puzzle. It's worth noting that these puzzles are not random, boring search and try puzzle like in Silent Hill or Kings Quest. It's more of, "how can I get to that wall?", or "how can push that button?". The puzzle take thought, but there never random, off the wall puzzles (like spending hours trying to find a key or some other stuff like that). Movement itself is a complete joy. Except for wall to wall jumps, movements don't require exact button pushing mechanics or precision timing. If you're on an overhang, and you need to jump to the next ledge, you just press x, and he'll jump and make it if you're aligned correctly. You can jump from wall to wall, jump up, jump down, run along wall, since, balance, crawl, and hang, and much more. If you do make a mistake, you've got the option of rewinding time, which means that you rarely repeat the same level over and over again. This means that the 12 hours to complete this is about 10 hours of real gameplay. Not like other games where 20 hours of gameplay is really just 5 hours extended over a long period of time through repetitive monsters or jumps, backtracking, or repeating levels. The fights are pretty easy, but they are decent nonetheless. It's good to know that they didn't make it overly hard or pointless. Somethings did bug me. Sometimes the camera angle is not the best. Sometimes you have to guess whether you can actually make a jump or not, or whether a ledge is there, and that could get annoying. Also, one level in particular near the end is very unintuitive. For some reason they take away your time reversal, they made the level really long, and the end of that level was very unintuitive and clumsy. That five minutes of gameplay took an agonizing hour and a half. My other gripe are with the cut-scenes. For some idiotic reason, they decided to make the dialogue volume really low and the background noise extremely high, thus making the vocals unintelligible. I couldn't understand half of what was going on. Worst part is - no subtitles. It's extremely terrible since any major game should catch such a bug, and the fix is really easy. I guess they designed it for televisions with high wattage Dolby surround, as opposed to normal televisions. Pros: Cons: Difficulty - Easy Frustration Level - Low Time to Complete: 12 hours
20 of 21 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
It certainly doesn't suck.,
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
Most video games these days seem all new-fangled and complicated to my 20-year-old self, but I'm into this. The puzzles are tricky without being frustrating, the graphics are rather gorgeous, and my friend Krista says the prince is hot. I think he's a little polygonal-looking, but I guess men with jagged edges need love, too. There are enough elements preserved from the original game to keep the title from being pointless cash-in-ism, but this new game won't have you mistaking your Playstation for an old-school Apple, either.I guess the only problem is the combat. You kill a zombie. Then another one. Then another one. It takes only a few seconds, but the process is repeated until you're praying for sweet, sweet oblivion. The first few battles aren't so bad, but each is more challenging than the last (and by "challenging," I mean "interminable"). On top of that, you have to keep the zombies from braining your requisite sassy love interest, but I'm not really sure why, since her only function in the game seems to be to make Disney-style repartée and somtimes accidentally shoot you. I also have a slight problem with the hero. He is headstrong and disobedient, often turning around and performing elaborate lunges to target a zombie that, unlike the one right in front of him, poses no immediate threat. I suspect that he does this because he resents my position of control, so sometimes I put the controller down and let the zombies have their way with him. It's very satisfying. The positive aspects of the game are well worth sitting through a few awkward, over-long battle sequences, though. I could watch the prince run up and down the walls until my eyeballs fall out, the puzzles straddle the line between ridiculously easy and frustratingly hard very well, and I suppose you can decide for yourself just how hot the prince is.
16 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Whole Lot Of Jumping Going On,
By Marc Ruby™ "The Noh Hare™" (Warren, MI USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
I freely admit I'm an RPG fan first last and always. Not only that, but I like the excruciatingly long RPG/adventures that can take a year to complete if you're serious about them. For that reason (and the fact I have the reflexes of a snail) I have pathologically avoided platform games. Not only did I not 'get' them, but I did horribly even when I did.Some recent experiences convinced me that maybe, just maybe, I should reconsider. Since Prince of Persia is 1) a name I actually recognize, and 2) getting rave reviews from everywhere, I picked it out for the great experiment. Frankly, I was blown away. First of all, this is a beautiful game. The detailing of the oriental palace through which the Prince is racing to collect and return the sands of time is beautifully done. The characters are animated to the point of appearing almost natural. Dimensionality and background animation are perfect. And everything works together like a charm. This is the platform genre's equivalent of Final Fantasy X, and the effect is totally engaging. In a sense, this is a puzzle game. In each setting you must examine the architecture and features to look for the right way to get from where you are to where you need to be. Because the game allows the player to rewind and retry a sequence of moves until they work with almost balletic synchronicity, you are never plagued with the 'Darn! I have to start over at the beginning' syndrome that has always been a bugaboo for me. I could rave for a long time. There is something exhilarating about running along a narrow beam 300 feet in the air while slashing at sand bats. And done forget trading sarcastic remarks with a Princess while you are at it. Even if you are only doing so on a video monitor. If you only intend to try one frantic, action-filled platform game in your life, buy this one - you will love it.
12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A Wonderful Yet Bumpy Carpet Ride,
By Christopher Hernandez (Converse, TX USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
From the development team who created the gritty stealth-actionphenomenon Splinter Cell, Prince of Persia: Sands of Time reflects on Ubi Soft Montreal Studios' enormous talents on integrating fantastic visuals with amazing gameplay value. Prior to trying this game out, I had not-so-fond memories of sludging through the dull, boring dungeons of the vintage Prince of Persia titles. Five minutes later into the game, however, I was completely hooked. The graphics in this game are nothing short of spectacular. From the illuminating beams of light splashing with glittering perfection on various surfaces to the ridiculously detailed environments, the visual quality truly shines in this title. But all of the aforementioned examples of the game's aesthetics is just cake dressing for the most important ingredient: gameplay. The heroic prince boasts a massive array of stylish and extremely effective skills in his arsenal. Such abilities include running along walls, vaulting over enemies, rebounding off walls to launch a diving strike, and other equally impressive moves. These techniques truly supplement the innovative combat mechanism in Prince of Persia. Even minor scuffles with baddies transform into a beautiful display of choreography. The vast environments in the game are truly a testament to creative thinking and adept gameplay skills. Many locations may easily require hours to navigate through, forcing gamers to contemplate which move should they make next. The assortment of puzzles will satisfy hardcore gamers who do not mind cooking their brains in order to find the solution to them. Avoiding perilous falls to an early grave and evading traps can be a cinch or a pain in the ass. Luckily, the prince possesses a weapon which is arguably more useful than his sword: the Dagger of Time. The Dagger of Time thankfully facilitates you into the trial-and-error nature of the game. If you miscalculate crucial jumps or when enemies unfairly dogpile and kill you, you can simply rewind time to give yourself another crack at the situation at hand. Other time-based skills comprise of slowing down time, freezing enemies, and stopping every goon in the vicinity before splitting them apart. Wise usage of the Dagger of Time is essential for success. Unfortunately, a handful of flaws somewhat hamper the entertaining experience. Hardcore gamers will undoubtedly appreciate the brutal difficulty, but casual gamers will cry foul and probably throw in the towel midway through the game. Some of the more elaborate puzzles will certainly frustrate many gamers quickly. I read through many of the video game magazines (no, I am not going to name them) that reviewed PoP: SoT, and almost all of the critics bitched about the lengthy battles. Personally, I find the violent encounters to be very satisfying, but the majority of gamers may not warm up to the long-ass fights. The camera system is especially jumpy; at times I had to struggle to reposition the view to clearly see where the hell am I going to jump to. Despite all of the mild faults, PoP: SoT is an astonishing achievement in the realm of electronic games. Even if you may take offense to the intense dedication that PoP: SoT requires,everyone with any sort of admiration for video games owe it to themselves to give this remarkable game a try.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
One of the Most Underrated Games,
By
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
These days, finding the perfect balance of graphics, play control, and plot in a game is like finding a needle in a haystack. Often too much focus is put on one aspect of the game while everything else remains seriously lacking. Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time manages to bring a fairly equal balance while adding in a little bit of nostalgia for those of us who remember the original.The story goes like this: there's this giant hourglass that contains "the Sands of Time" (therein lies the title), the hourglass can only be unlocked using the Dagger of Time. Both are considered treasures, but few know the horrors that will be unleashed if the hourglass is ever opened. Enter the prince...of Persia (and the rest of the title becomes clear), who through the treachery of the Vizier, mistakenly opens the hourglass and releases the Sands of Time turning the entire kingdom into a wasteland filled with sand zombies. Now it's up to the Prince and the Maharajah's daughter, Farah, to stop the zombies and return the Sands of Time to the hourglass. The story seems a little simplistic, but it's well told. The entire game plays through the Prince's perspective as he narrates the story to someone. If you find yourself dead and needing to continue from a previous save, you'll hear the Prince correct his narration flub by saying "no, no, that's not how it happened", or "I didn't fall there". The narration also helps move the story along while the dialogue between Prince and Farah adds a little humor. If you've played a Prince of Persia game before, you might as well ignore your previous experience because it won't do you much good here. Half the things Prince can do weren't even dreamt of when the original game was made. Throughout the game you'll have to rely on running, jumping, swinging, tight-rope walking, wall-walking, and combat just to progress further in the game. At times you'll be forced to run along a wall to reach a distant ledge, only to have to leap from the crumbling ledge to a stalactite that's about to fall, leap to another, then another, and finally to a safe ledge. There's little room for error, so enter the Dagger of Time. Using the dagger you can rewind time after you die. Missed that last jump? No problem, just rewind and do it again. Unfortunately you can only do this a limited number of times, and you can only go so far back in time. The dagger also allows you to slow down time, or stop it entirely while giving Prince a speed boost to quickly eliminate enemies. The drawback is that all of this requires sand tanks, sand you can acquire by defeating the numerous sand zombies. The game controls well, there are few complaints there. Controlling time and numerous save points keep you from getting too frustrated, while cutscenes at save points also give you a glimpse of things to come and provide hints on how to solve puzzles or make your way through an area. If I were to nitpick about anything it would be the fighting. Most of the time you find yourself surrounded by three or more enemies and it becomes difficult trying to defeat them, especially when you have to deliver a killing blow using the dagger to prevent zombies from rising again. Graphically, the game is gorgeous, and coming from a guy who never uses the word "gorgeous", you know the graphics are good. The lighting is perfect, the game is filled with well rendered locations, and even simple things like realistically moving cloths on the walls make the areas seem almost alive. To top it off fog-like sand covers some parts of the ground adding to the game's atmosphere. The downside is the Prince, Farah, and the zombies aren't rendered quite as well as the backgrounds, but they're impressive. If there were any glaring downside to the game, it would be the sound. Often the sound makes it feel like you're playing the game with a bucket on your head. It's a shame too, because the voice acting, music, and sound effects are actually decent. The game isn't long, and it's not all that hard either. There's a fair amount of difficult gameplay that will have you repeating some tasks, but by the time you get really good at the game, it's already over. But the question many of you are asking is "is it worth my precious, hard-earned money?" Well, if you ask me, it is. But I'm still going to recommend renting it first, just to get a feel for it and see what it's all about before you shell out the cash for it. Even if you don't end up buying it, I promise you'll at least get something out of this excellent game.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
It's not on Sony's Greatest Hits List for nothing...,
By Wolfmanmachine "Will" (Houston, TX) - See all my reviews
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
I recently purchased this game on sale for $15.00. It's definitely worth that, maybe more, but I might have had a problem with it paying the original $50.
The game is very good, as any number of other reviews here can tell you. Once I popped it into my PS2, I had trouble turning it off because I was having so much fun. Personally, I find the negative reviews to be far more valuable than the positive ones, so I'll focus my attention on the downsides of this game. For starters, some reviewers have complained that the game is too short with no replay value. I can agree with that, even though I'm only 60% finished at this point, but I think there is something to be said for a game you can actually finish in your lifetime. I'm 27 years old and don't have time to sit in front of the console every day, all day long. The most I get are a few hours on the weekend. So, I can really appreciate a game that challenges and entertains me while allowing me the satisfaction of actually completing it in its entirety without the need for cheat codes and player's guides. There are some other reviews that say the puzzles are either too hard or too easy. So far, I've found most of them to be rather straightforward. In the first half of the game, the solutions to the puzzles are usually starring you right in the face and all you have to do is climb or jump on whatever object is most obvious to make it through the rooms (the game also gives you hints in the form of visions). It does get more challenging later on, as I have recently learned. Still, I would have preferred more of a challenge where you actually have to piece together more clues to come up with the solution. Still other reviews have complained about lack of replay value. Again, I agree, but it's to be expected from a game like this. One you've played the game through once and solved all the puzzles, there's really no reason to do it again. It has also been noted that there aren't really any "unlockables" that would promote replaying the game again. Personally, I don't replay most of the games I buy for lack of time. Moreover, I don't particularly enjoy replaying the same game over and over again just to unlock visuals, costumes, weapons or other such needless things you find in most other games. That seems a cheap way to add replay value to me, since those things rarely, if ever, have any effect on the gameplay the second time through. As I see it, you either enjoy playing it the first time or you don't ever really enjoy playing it at all. Regardless of it's flaws, this game is unique and fun, and it doesn't insult your intelligence or your wallet. It's too bad there aren't more games like it. The game is on the Greatest Hits List for the PS2, and I've seen it in the bargain bin for the X-box, so there's no reason not to pick up a copy of it.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Breathtaking and Beautiful, a Masterpiece...,
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
Breathtaking and beautiful, The Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time is a masterpiece of a game. You play as "the Prince"...of Persia (seriously,our prince is nameless). He is the youngest son of the king Sharaman of Persia, and he is willing to prove his worth. So during a raid on a city, he sneaks into the temples and nabs a mystic dagger. He presents the dagger to his dad and the Vizier recognizes it as the dagger of time. while on a visit at a nearby ally's palace, the vizier tricks the prince into using the dagger to unleash the sands of time harnessed within an hourglass. The glowing sands escape and transform eveyone within the castle into sand monsters... except for the Prince, the Vizier,and the mysterious Farah.
The story is rather simple, but turns into something far more touching and heart-warming. The characters are realistic, likeable and are much more 3-dimensional than one would have thought: the prince isnt spoiled, he is determined to repair what he has done and matures throughout the game.He realizes how his pride is what caused this mess ,and it further inspires him to succeed. Farah is the daughter of a conquered Maharaja, but instead of picking a fight with the prince, she does the smart, sensible thing and sticks with the prince to survive.The love/hate relationship between the 2 makes for some funny stuff and when seperated, the prince isnt above complaining to himself in a humorous fashion. For a prince,the Prince is rather athletic: he can run across walls, shimmy across ledges, run up walls, swing on poles in a manner that shames pro gymnasts, and is quite the deadly swordsman. Suffice to say,the Prince is going to need everyone of these skills to survive. And the palace's defense system is more likely to impale him than be of help. Amazingly, anyone of his attacks and maneauvers are easy to pull off (the magic of R1, *happy sigh*). Using your wits and skills, you will navigate through the palace's various rooms and get past deadly traps. These traps vary from spiked log swings to wall gears. Puzzles are scattered throughout the game and require thought (or perhaps I'm not as bright as I'd hoped). You will also encounter various enemies (all sand-monsterfied). There are red garbed men wielding clubs and swords, scantily clad women with daggers, and blue robed men with axes, plus the local freaky fauna (*shudders*, the birds). Most are easily defeated, and I wished the action in the game to be more... interesting. in the end the fighting is rather easy (and easy to execute), and doubtlessy fun, but I fell in love with the platforming. Nothing compares to the platforming (no worries, it isnt crash bandicoot). You will love the navigating and the ease of doing so (bye bye to clumsy controls). I just had to devote a chapter (albiet small) to Farah.She kicks butt. Farah assists you during battle and is an important part of the puzzle solving. She can fit through small cracks and helps The Prince navigate the castle.Admit it... you need her. Even though it looks a bit dated by now, PoP:SoT is a pretty game. The castle is bathed in a warm glow that accent the color pallete nicely. The enemy models are well-done, and The Prince's and Farah's models look real nice too. Sound is limited towards effects, so music is used spareingly ,used mostly during cutscenes. I liked this desision to an extent: on one hand, it gives the castle an extra dimension of reality, on the other, the music that IS there is beautiful. I must give props to the acting as well, it was expertly done. PoP:SoT is short but sweet, clocking at about 10 hours . Ton of fun, great graphics, and a certain charm, The Prince of Persia:The Sands of Time is a must-have masterpiece.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The new genre-defining classic,
By Simon (Brampton, ON) - See all my reviews
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
Prince of Persia: Sands of Time was Ubisoft's first effort in a new Prince of Persia trilogy, which ended with the latest installment called Two Thrones. In this game the Prince must set things right after unleashing the sands of time, and also thwart the plans of the evil Vizier.
Similiar to what Nintendo did with Mario, Metroid and Zelda, Ubisoft's revamp of the classic series takes the action-platformer genre in new directions. The Prince has complete freedom of movement that allows him to traverse huge environments gracefully with little effort. He can run on walls, crawl around ledges and corners, swing across multiple beams, and perform other physical feats with very simplistic controls. This is the first game I've played in a long while where platform-jumping and climbing has been truly fun. What's more, one of the powers of the sands of time is to rewind time on the fly. If you make a mistake, rewind time and try again. It makes the experience a lot more forgiving and enjoyable. What's also enjoyable is the atmosphere. Ubisoft picked a marvellous way to present the game, and some great voice-acting to pull it off. The whole game is the Prince narrating past events, so you often gets his thoughts and "Peter Parker" asides as you play. It's clever and endearing. What Ubisoft dropped the ball on though was the combat. They came up with a combat system that works better than most games, but simply throw in too many enemies at a time. These guys respawn in endless waves, teleport in front of you, crowd you, stab you when you're down, and generally make the game frustrating. Some combat sequences can be skipped, but you're mostly required to play through them like Ubisoft asks you to. Thankfully the platforming elements are so strong that they overshadow the combat weaknesses. Overall, Sands of Time is a solid game. It's not a long game like Mario and Zelda, but I wouldn't call it short either. It's a solid experience that had me marvelling at its innovations when I played it, and its more than worth the discounted price you can snag it for now.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A true classic,
By Maria Marienthal (Indiana, PA USA) - See all my reviews
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time (Video Game)
You know what makes it even more classic? It is totally underrated.
This is another game that was near perfect. It captured the original Price of Persia essence in 3D without compromising tradition. You're still dealing with spikes and gaps and high walls, but the Prince has all the tricks he needs to overcome these things...and...he can turn back time. Timeplay is fantastic in this game. It works extremely well and is very useful 99% of the time. It has been a very long time since I played this game, but I can tell you this: you won't regret spending 10 hours on this game. It is totally worth it. The focus is as equally on combat as it is on puzzle solving and the combination is great. It's just nice to encounter a game that is different. The graphics are stunning, especially for their time, and the game is slightly more cartoonish. But that just adds to its uniqueness. Take a look at the price. This is ideal. A good game for this cheep? What have you got to lose? You'll enjoy this title. Happy gaming |
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Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time by UBI Soft (PlayStation2)
$19.99 $17.43
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