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Now that three years have passed, the new version, renamed Tetrisphere, is precisely the sort of game that the Nintendo 64 really needs, offering revolutionary gameplay, impressive long-term value, and a set of visual effects that go above and beyond what Sony's PlayStation can handle. Originally described by its designers as the anti-Tetris, Tetrisphere turns Tetris on its ear by asking you to yank Tetris-shaped blocks out of a pit rather than stack them up, further complicating the matter by making the "pit" into a rotating ball with several onion-like layers composed entirely of blocks to be removed. If you can pull off enough pieces to expose a stretch of the ball's glowing core, you win and move on to the next stage. If you screw up or take too much time figuring out how to pull blocks off the ball, a block gets added to the surface as punishment, with a maximum of two permitted errors before the third ends your game.
While Tetrisphere is unquestionably the most original Tetris derivative released to date, it is by no means the most intuitive. Compile's Puyo Puyo, Capcom's Super Puzzle Fighter II Turbo, Nintendo's Tetris Attack, and Sega's Baku Baku Animal offer more immediate gratification because of their inherent similarity to the well-known Tetris and to each other. Since it first appeared as a Jaguar prototype, the appeal of H2O's game over similar games has been in challenging you to think more strategically and under greater pressure as the sphere comes closer and closer to the screen's edge, and as time runs out. Nintendo's role in the game's development has primarily been to give the game much greater long-term depth, to fine-tune the gameplay, and to add a number of distinctive play modes.
In fact, the play modes truly enhance the game's value, with one mode operating as described previously above, another giving you a series of block-dropping puzzles to complete, and another presenting a nice variety of individual challenges, such as finding pictures hidden on the core of the ball, shattering a tower by unseating the blocks beneath it, and protecting another tower from damage while moving blocks around it. Additionally, a two-player split-screen competitive mode offers a personalized one-on-one competition for two people to enjoy, complete with robotic characters to choose from and a smattering of adjustable settings. The guiding hand of Nintendo's Ken Lobb can be seen in Tetrisphere's in-game depth, which, like in his previous hit, Killer Instinct, offers a number of subtleties that better players can learn to understand, while allowing less-experienced players to still have a good time.
Most surprising about Tetrisphere is its aesthetic presentation, which contrasts sharply with the intentionally simple formats of older Tetris games. Where the rotating "ball" on the Jaguar was jagged with polygons, the Nintendo 64 actually pulls off the previously-unseen feat of creating an almost perfectly smooth, real-time sphere and moving it convincingly. Then it puts two spheres on-screen in two-player mode. Even more impressive, Tetrisphere's backgrounds are perpetually moving futuristic 3D scenes, some of which are mind-blowingly beautiful and the least of which are still cool. The only visual gripe is the initially overwhelming iconic in-game interface, which puts graphical speed meters and combo counters in places where you can't really look while playing. Tempest 2000-style transparent numbers fading in and out of the center of the screen would have sufficed.
From an audio standpoint, Tetrisphere is the first Tetris title to have high-quality music, with high enough sample quality to make the cartridge sound just like what you would expect from a solid techno CD. And you can choose to listen to any of the game's tracks at any time while playing. Sound effects are fine, but there's no question that some in-game voice samples would have done even more to jazz up the audio.
All things considered, Atari, 3DO, Sony, Sega, and third-party developers have had more than two years to come up with a puzzle game that does for 32- and 64-bit hardware what Tetris did for 8- and 16-bit machines, and the only game that comes close is Sony's modest Intelligent Qube. Impressively polished in every area, Tetrisphere provides a new puzzle depth benchmark while doing an excellent job of showing off the abilities of the Nintendo 64 hardware, making the title yet another in the handful of "great" N64 games that contrast sharply with much of the machine's third-party dreck. Against the N64's vaguely similar Blast Corps - another great strategy-intensive action-puzzler - Tetrisphere easily holds its own and offers itself as the N64's first two-player competitive puzzle action. With my hopes for many more successes to come, H2O's first game is highly recommended. --Jer Horwitz
--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
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Tetris is Back and it's Hot!,
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars = Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Tetrisphere (Game Cartridge)
This game is perfect for all those tetris addicts out there. Remember the original tetris, of course, it's still around and still hot. Well, add another dimension, a giant sphere, and take blocks off instead of putting them on. This game is good for anyone who has the addiction. After the first Tetris, many have tried to come after. This game truly is for the next generation of tetris addicts. It has many different gameplay's and even a minimal storyline for the kiddies. This is a great game to buy for yourself or for your family. Remember, feed the need!
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Awesome,
By A Customer
= Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars = Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars = Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Tetrisphere (Game Cartridge)
This takes Tetris to the next level. This game is very intense and makes you think in many dimensions
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This Game Is Cool,
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: Tetrisphere (Game Cartridge)
I really like this game. This game is challenging. I've had this game for 2 years, and I haven't beat it yet. I always get stuck on a certain level. But if you really want a game that's challenging, that will take you more than a week to beat, and something you can play all day, I recommend this game.
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