image: Majesco's Advent Rising: review
Similar articles
ADVERTISEMENT
Reviews Disclaimer
Readers are reminded that the opinions expressed, and the results published in connection with reviews and/or laboratory test reports carried out on computing systems and/or related items are confined to, and representative of, only those goods supplied and should not be construed as a recommendation to purchase.

Review: Majesco Advent Rising

Does Majesco’s long-awaited advent rise to the occasion?

What is this?
Price: £29.99
Manufacturer: Majesco Entertainment



Ratings
Overall rating: Overall rating
Rate this product
Verdict

Overall: Advent Rising’s big production values promise an ambitious sci-fi saga, but instead the game just comes across as a poor man’s Halo .


Jonathan Parkyn, Personal Computer World 18 Mar 2006

ADVERTISEMENT

From its Half-Life-style logo to its overblown movie-like opening sequence (in which the scriptwriters get first credit) and widescreen presentation, you know that Advent Rising is intended to be a plot-driven sci-fi epic of cinematic proportions.

In fact, the eagerly-anticipated PC and Xbox third-person shooter never really lives up to the hype.

Story-wise, Advent Rising is a disappointing hodgepodge of everything from Star Wars to Halo.

You find yourself in the flight boots of ace pilot Gideon Wyeth as he and his brother (a sort of Han Solo to your Luke Skywalker) investigate the arrival of a mysterious alien ship.

The visitors turn out to be friendly but, before long, a new race of evil aliens bent on eliminating the human race has joined the party and all hell brakes loose.
As Gideon, you must run around shooting things in an effort to save your species from extermination.

To start with the action is pretty formulaic. The only thing to distinguish the game from legions of other sci-fi shooters during the early portion is its unusual targeting system that utilises the mouse wheel to scroll through and select your enemies.

At a certain moment during the game your character will develop a range of cod-Jedi special powers. In fact, the game livens up considerably at this point and implementing your newfound talents can be pretty fun.

The main trouble with Advent Rising is that it’s a bit bland. It wears its influences on its sleeve but never even comes close to achieving the same greatness as the games and movies it apes.

Characters are two-dimensional, environments are featureless and samey, while the frequent scripted cut scenes are clumsy and, frankly, a bit embarrassing.

Combined with repetitive gameplay and little innovation, it’s hard to care whether you reach the end of the game or not.

System requirements:
2GHz processor
256MB of Ram
5GB hard disk
DVD-ROM drive
Windows 2000/XP

See also:

Image: Toca 3: PCW reviewDrive yourself to distraction with more motor sports than you can shake a gearstick at  17 Mar 2006
Review: Star Wars Empire at WarLead the Rebel Alliance or strike back as the Empire in this Star Wars-themed strategy game  15 Mar 2006
Review: And Then There Were NoneThe queen of the whodunit comes to the desktop with this adventure game  24 Feb 2006
Review: Need For Speed – Most WantedRace cars and win money but you have to avoid the law too  18 Feb 2006
Review: Stubbs the ZombieThe tables are turned as the zombie genre gets a new lease of life  16 Feb 2006
Review: PsychonautsA colourful and imaginative platform game for desktops  15 Feb 2006
The king of WWII shooters returns for another tour of duty  27 Dec 2005
Experience the famous adventure through the eyes of Jack Driscoll and the giant ape himself  15 Dec 2005
An edge-of-your-seat FPS with horror elements  12 Dec 2005
Chrome SpecforceBecome a highly trained soldier of the future  02 Nov 2005

All Action & Adventure Games

Like this story? Spread the news by clicking below:

Post this to Delicious del.icio.us    Post this to Digg Digg this    Post this to reddit reddit!

Permalink for this story

R E A D E R   R E V I E W S
M A R K E T P L A C E
Sponsored links