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Outlander (SNES) Playthrough 3 месяца назад


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Outlander (SNES) Playthrough

A playthrough of Mindscape's 1993 action game for the Super Nintendo, Outlander. Outlander was Mindscape's second game based on The Road Warrior, but unlike the NES game (   • Mad Max (NES) Playthrough  ), this one isn't an officially licensed tie-in. Mindscape no longer had the rights to the IP by the time the original Sega Genesis game was released in 1992, so all of the overt Mad Max references had to be removed. The SNES port came out the following year. Max has been rechristened as "the outlander," a man who has to battle his way across the Australian outback in order to save his friend - Dr. Beaumont, a scientist who has discovered how to produce an unlimited supply of fresh water - from a violent cyborg named Duster. The game plays out like a rally race. You fend off attacks from Duster's goons as drive your interceptor down an endless highway, and you can refuel and resupply at the twenty-eight towns that lie between you and your doctor buddy. On the road, molotov throwing bikers roll up in waves as they try to box you in, helicopters rain explosives down on the asphalt, and some inconsiderate soul has even gone to the effort to fill the roadway with flimsy wooden gates. Of course, you are the outlander, so bikers and helicopters pose little threat. If someone rolls up alongside your car, just point your shotgun out the window, pull the trigger, and *poof*, they're out of your hair. If you spot an angry mob approaching in the rear-view mirror, slam on the brakes and enjoy watching them take a free flying lesson over your hood. And if the choppers become irksome, your car comes equipped with SAMs for a reason. Use them! When you reach a town, you walk around busting open crates in search of supplies as cloned armies of bald men in wifebeaters and shotgun-toting ladies in denim skirts attempt to murder you. They're all easily dispatched with a few punches to the crotch, and before long, you'll be back out on the open road. Outlander's gameplay concept is a creative way to present the post-apocalyptic world of the film, and it starts off with a lot of promise. The graphics hit the right vibe, and the gratuitous displays of violence are good at grabbing your attention. But Outlander doesn't quite live up to expectations. There's very little variety to the gameplay, and you'll see everything the game has to offer within the first ten minutes. The game also runs terribly. The framerate in the driving scenes hovers between 7-10 FPS, so there's no sense of speed to the action. It doesn't help that the on-foot scenes have no depth, either. You just crouch, punch, shuffle forward a few steps, crouch again, punch again, and so on until you're back at the car. Novelty can only carry a game so far, and it's disappointing how quickly Outlander runs out of gas. I enjoyed it for a short while, but it took a whole lot of willpower to see it through to the end. There are glimpses of Mad Max's movie magic sprinkled here and there, but it never manages to properly capitalize on its ideas. _____________ No cheats were used during the recording of this video. NintendoComplete (http://www.nintendocomplete.com/) punches you in the face with in-depth reviews, screenshot archives, and music from classic 8-bit NES games!

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