Cartoon Network Türkiyeye Hoşgeldiniz! Lütfen Giriş Yapınız , Eğer Üye Değilseniz Lütfen Üye Olunuz!
Sayın Cartoon Network Türkiye...
Cartoon Network Türkiye
Cartoon Network Türkiyeye Hoşgeldiniz! Lütfen Giriş Yapınız , Eğer Üye Değilseniz Lütfen Üye Olunuz!
Sayın Cartoon Network Türkiye...
Cartoon Network Türkiye
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
Cartoon Network Türkiye
Cartoon Network Türkiyeye Hoşgeldiniz! Forumuzun Bütün Kaynaklarından Yararlanabilmek İçin Üye Olmalısınız! İnşallah Değerli Vakitinizle İyi Vakitler Geçirirsiniz... İyi Vakit Geçirmeniz Dileğiyle Hoşçakalın! Powered By : Cartoon Network Türkiye
Konu: Knd oyun bilgileri Perş. Haz. 18, 2009 9:37 am
Kids Next Door: Operation Videogame Grade: C+ Publisher: Take Two Interactive (2005) Reviewed: 2006/1/1 Rating: Everyone (cartoon violence, crude humor) Kid Friendly!
Based on the Cartoon Network series, the Kids Next Door (KND) are five young secret agents (under the age of 13) who make their headquarters in a colossal tree house. Their mission? To protect all kids from cruel adults who would subject them to green vegetables, piano lessons, homework, and other unmentionable horrors. It's certainly a good cause, but how does it play? Like every other platform game you've ever played in your life! Seriously, there are floating platforms, laser beams, items to collect, electrified floors, switches to pull, weapon power-ups, and boss encounters. Heck, there are even stealth stages (ugh!). Despite its derivative nature, KND still gets by thanks to its varied gameplay, brisk pacing, responsive controls, and reasonable difficulty. Blasting the generic henchmen is no problem thanks to the tight lock-on controls, although switching targets using the right stick can be awkward. The jumping controls are forgiving enough, so you shouldn't have any problems leaping between those giant donuts. Through the 15+ stages, you'll face some unconventional villains including spank-happy vampires, nefarious lunch ladies, and the notorious "Toiletnator". You can unlock a lot of "Super Triple Top Secret" stuff by collecting - you guessed it - rainbow monkeys. KND's graphics are cartoon quality, meaning there's not a lot of detail. There are camera issues, but nothing more than you'd normally have to deal with in this type of game. The orchestrated soundtrack is surprisingly good, and has a dramatic James Bond motif. The varied stages include tree houses, factories, backyards, and floating pirate ships. Unfortunately, areas within each stage tend to repeat, giving the player a serious case of deja-vu. You'll play as all five characters through the 14 stages, each with their own set of moves. Most stages are strictly by-the-numbers, but a few display some innovation, like one where you round up scurrying hamsters (which is much easier when you acquire the freeze gun, by the way). But the stages that really captured my attention were the flying shooting stages. Surprisingly well executed, these combine old school vertical-shooting gameplay with beautiful, fluid 3D graphics. You can power-up your weapon to several degrees, and there are even smart bombs (known as "Chicken-Soup-erators" here). KND's cut-scenes are appropriately juvenile, but some of the dialogue is pretty clever, and the only character I couldn't stomach was the bubbly "Numbah 3". The game is well crafted in general, with a handy auto-save, infrequent load screens, and dialogue you can quickly page through. Kids Next Door: Operation Videogame could be considered a "cookie cutter" game, but it deserves credit for its clear objectives, reasonable difficulty, and kid-friendly theme. Fans of the show should bump up the grade by a letter. Copyright 2006 The Video Game Critic.