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Published : January 12, 2009 |
Author : Chrissy Snow | |||||||||
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Ful Walkthrough for Prince of Persia: Fallen King for Nintendo DS. We have the full online walkthrough strategy guide right here! GameGuideDog.Com is a website dedicated to creating new guides for you especially when no others exist. We are commited to helping gamers hrough games and confident that our support is one of the best gaming resources anywhere! This season we are starting off with some overlooked DS walkthroughs that many have cried for over the past year. (Including games like "At World's End" DS but more on that later).... In Prince of Persia: Fallen King we have a more cartoony looking prince doing the very similiar tasks of previous titles (especially like the older Gameboy Avance style games) except for one thing, you have to use the stylus. FOR EVERYTHING! I was initially disbelieving of the idea that everything requiring a stylus would be fun.. Sadly, this is true of DS Prince -- meant to appear more childlike in superlative means and deliberately redesigned into an almost anime-style for esthetic reasons, unfortunately it really doesn't create too much appeal to make the differences warrented. In counterpoint, since it is the worst looking iteration of the character since the franchise's bring up a generation ago if not since its origination. The stages themselves, however -- polygonal in nature but made to look like 2D classics -- are extremely varied in design, ranging from deserts to caverns, cities, jungles and more, and the 3D engine allows for some detailed environments and relatively fluid animations on Nintendo's handheld. The biggest problem is that with several enemies on-screen at once, the framerate dips noticeably. Were The Fallen King controlled with the D-Pad, as you might expect, I think it would have proven a much more satisfying endeavor. Even with some fluidity dips here and there, all the fundamentals are in place for a fun 2D platformer, bringing along difficult multi-jump challenges, leaps across dangerous obstacles, a embarrassment of simple battles with enemies, and more. Whether you're running from boulders, jumping over spikes or leaping back and forth between two pillars in order to ascend to the top their top, there's a lot of potential for good fun, a truth accentuated by a second playable character who is handy with magic. In The Fallen King, the DS version of the game, he's sporting a more cartooney, Saturday morning TV get-up. It's inevitable, of course, that our Prince wouldn't be wearing the same quality of outfit in the DS game as he does for the Xbox 360, PS3 and PC versions. Ubisoft's Casablanca studio, which has to be the most exotically-named developer in the world, hasn't got the kind of graphical horsepower to play with that Ubisoft Montreal enjoyed. But that hasn't prevented it from stamping its own impression on the much-loved series. Other great new video game walk throughs and strategy game guides available from GAMEGUIDEDOG.COM (A Wonderdog Software Company): |
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