All the wrestlers share the same move set, but they each have their own finishing move which is cool. I love this game I really do, but there is one area that the Sega version struggles and that is the controls. This is a game that was made to be played with a 6-button controller. Most of the moves are executed via the grapple system. You enter a grapple then you need to mash a certain button as fast as you can. If you have a 6-button controller, each move is given its own button.
If you have a 3-button controller you have to mash two at a time! This as I am sure you can guess is very frustrating to do and takes a long time to get used to. I do feel that the SNES version is the better game. Not just because of the roster, but because the SNES has a standard 6-button controller.
You can still have fun with this game with a 3-button controller, but it takes a great deal of work. Still, if you are a wrestling fan you need to give this one a try.
You don't get a season mode here. You don't get any create-a-wrestler options. You don't even get a true tag-team mode. All you'll find are wrestlers, lots of them, all in the ring at once in the game's best play mode, the Royal Rumble. As you've no doubt read in every preview of this thing, Royal Rumble crams up to nine wrestlers into the ring at the same time, with no hits to the framerate, and you and three pals can control four of them.
It's chaotic fun for a while, but the thrill wears thin quickly because all you really end up doing is wailing on opponents who wander too near the ropes. The other main mode--Exhibition--is much more straightforward and blase.
It's just standard arcade-style action with simplified controls similar to SmackDownl's. During later matches the Al cheats more than In fact, there's really no reason you would want to play this game alone.
It's more of a party game. Royal Rumble certainly looks good--some specials are downright as-seen-on-UPN fantastic. But I'd just as soon play the coin-op version in the arcades, where I can see the flashy visuals for cheap. Royal Rumble. Having a potential squad of grapplers practically had me wetting myself. But unlike SmackDownl, with its oodles of options, awesome create-a-player mode and stunning graphics, RR stands out because it contains absolutely none of these things.
An arcade mode, a versus mode and a chintzy options list is all you get. That's IT! The characters are ugly, the replay value is nil, control is weak, and the voice samples are nonexistent.
This is one big disappointing cash-in on the Dreamcast's popularity. Avoid it. I'm not a big wrestling fan any more, so maybe I can't appreciate all the nuance to this game. But from a pure entertainment perspective, RR has limited appeal. Like wrestling itself, there's tots of flash but not much substance.
This Is basically a strategy-free-button-mashlng-arcade-style-party-game. In the ring I often had trouble turning to face my opponent, instead my guy would lunge to his flank, unwittingly opening up to power moves. The graphics aren't anything special, and the moves weren't all that fun to execute. Played the Super NES version?
This one is basically the same thing on a different platform! The colors are diminished somewhat, but wrestling fans will love it! Be sure to use the 6-button controller with this one! Assume the role of any one of twelve "classic" WWF characters. Go head-to-head in the one-on-one mode, try a tag team, triple tag team, or a Royal Rumble - a nerve-racking fight to the end.
Wear them down in the ring or knock out the ref and get illegal outside the ring - flying chairs galore! Head's up! Wrestling games are really not my cup of tea but i must give credit where credit is due!
The graphics, sounds and play control are very well executed, and the brawls outside the ring are a riot - especially the ones with the folding chair you can use to bash opponents! The tag-team feature is also a novel idea. I'm not a big fan of the WWF but this game may just change that.
There are plenty of wrestlers to use, each with their special attacks. Author THQ. Updated Over a year ago. Last revision More than a year ago. Ok We use our own and third-party cookies for advertising, session, analytic, and social network purposes.
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Only joking. Any good? Well surprisingly, yes, actually. Wanna make something of it? And I should know. Not that that is immediately apparent mind you. Oooooh nooooo. Assaulted by the mire of wacky beeps and whizzes which accompany each selection, you'll be cnnging in your Y-fronts at the apparent craaayyyyzeeeeness of it all. The match selections, single, tag, tornado tag, handicap, triple threat, fatal four-way, king of the ring and lesbo slap-up all of the above just with females , however, are far from limited, as is the excellent wrestler editor which allows you to create your own monstrosity to fight for your cause in the squared circle.
How we laughed. However, it's once the action kicks off that things really start to happen. Ring entrances are explosive, with each wrestler's strut to the ring recreated with spod-like attention to detail. Pyrotechnics pop, lights flash, music blares, people cheer and videos roll on the big arena screen, concocting a charged atmosphere of pure adrenaline-charged hype before the impending action.
You can even rush your opponent as they enter the ring and pummel them with a variety of weapons, too. Which is nice. The actual bouts are sheer en-tert-ain-ment. The beauty of this three-pronged victory meter means you really have to put some thought into what you're doing.
Repeat the same move over and over and the crowd will get bored of you.
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