Technology
Video-game review: TV parody games for Wii are a treat
01:00 AM EST on Saturday, January 10, 2009
Like so many American creations — baseball, comic books, rock ’n’ roll — the video game is a mongrel art form. Literature, music, art and film all get jumbled together in this relatively new medium, but even that isn’t enough: Designers have to figure out how to make the whole package interactive as well.
While Fallout 3, for example, is rooted in post-apocalyptic science fiction, it also draws from 1940s music, splatter movies and Dungeons & Dragons. The less ambitious games reviewed here display their influences right in their titles.
Rayman Raving Rabbids TV Party (Ubisoft, for the Wii, $49.99): Ubisoft’s screaming, madcap rabbits have become regulars on the Wii over the last three years. Like too many other Wii products, the Rabbids titles are collections of minigames, but they bring welcome doses of character and chaos to the increasingly stale genre.
This time, the bunnies have invaded Rayman’s TV set, careening through an assortment of TV parodies, from trashy reality shows to music videos to dramas like “Prison Fake.” There are a few duds, like an uninspired Project Runway knockoff, but about 90 percent of the minigames are keepers.
Some of them use the Wii Balance Board, which you may be asked to sit on. Yes, at long last you can control a game — say, tobogganing down a mountain on a wildebeest — with your rear end. You’re in the Movies (Codemasters, for the Xbox 360, $69.99): Minigame anthologies are less common on the Xbox. This one builds on a gimmick: the Xbox Live Vision Camera, which lets you insert video of yourself into the game. (The camera is included in the package.)
The premise here is that you’re performing in a B-movie, so you need to obey the director’s demands, perhaps swatting at monsters or running from villains. The problem is that the camera doesn’t do a very good job of separating players from background objects, so you usually end up with disconnected body parts floating around the screen.
Even if you have the patience to sort out the technical issues, the games in Movies are slow-paced, repetitive and just not much fun.
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