Follow us on:
Marvel Trading Card Game Review
8 out of 15
There’s a good trading card game in here, if you can get past the steep learning curve and brutal AI to find it.
Date: Tuesday, July 31, 2007
Author: Brandon Cackowski-Schnell

If you can get past these frustrations, there is a tremendous amount of game play in this game. There are two story lines, one for heroes and one for villains, each consisting of seven chapters, with each chapter consisting up to a dozen matches. Each match may be a single match or a team-up where you play multiple games to win the match.

There’s also a Challenge mode which allows you to battle the AI after you select your opponent, difficulty level and opponent’s deck. Finally, Marvel Trading Card Game supports local multiplayer as well as WFC play against random players, or friends you have Friend Codes for. Unlike the PC or PSP version, online play is limited solely to DS vs. DS play, and there are no card purchasing options. Finding an opponent is relatively quick and lag was not an issue.

It is because there is so much gameplay present that it is easy to recommend this game to those that are already well versed in the Marvel Trading Card Game and have the patience to get through the early parts of the game until they can build a competitive deck. Those looking at this game as a way to jump into the trading card genre, or just looking for a new way to make their’s Marvel, will be better suited with heading down to the Game Shop and entering the tutelage of the resident ten year old experts.

Fossil Fighters: Champions Review
More dinosaurs, less interesting..
Bejeweled 3 Review
Bejeweled 3 makes its way to the DS. You know the drill.
The name says it all.
More Naruto for the DS--this time in rumble form.
You sank my.. oh wait, this one's based on the movie.
Epic's game engine technology gets stereoscopic 3D gaming technology.
Activision's super hero title dominates the rest at retail.
Concert series will be in town during E3 week.
Legend of Zelda: Spirit Tracks Preview
While it may not reinvent the series -- does that really matter?
From GDC we learn more about the multiplayer aspects of this upcoming DS Zelda title.
Almost a decade and a half later Square Enix's Final Fantasy III is a testament to the series and a showcase of what's possible on the DS.
Atlus turns the action RPG genre upside down with this promising Nintendo DS game.