Follow us on:
X-Men Origins: Wolverine Preview
Is this the rare movie tie in game that is actually...worth playing?
Date: Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Author: Tracy Erickson

The game includes a number of massive set pieces and big boss battles. Two such unrelated scenes involve skirting machine gun fire from a helicopter as Wolverine makes an escape from Alkali Lake; the other pits him against a gigantic Sentinel. The former pulls the camera back to the point of almost turning play into a side-scroller. As the helicopter fires down on Wolverine, you're prompted to evade the bullets and then attack it head-on. The other scene puts Wolverine face-to-foot against a Sentinel. Not even coming up to the machine's ankle, you're prompted to engage Wolverine's feral sense to identify its weak points. Highlighted objects are interactive; in the case of the Sentinel, the sole of its foot lights up as a weak spot. Slashing at it whittles away stamina until it decides to jet into the air, at which point Wolverine grabs on for the ride. A mid-air battle ensues that's completely over-the-top.

Whenever he's not assaulting an enemy or being attacked, Wolverine's health is slowly restored. Damage is displayed in real-time on Wolverine's body, so a swipe to his right abdomen shows up in the precise spot at which he was attacked. Four layers of tissue: clothing, skin, muscle, and bone appear realistically as Wolverine takes a beating. Without glancing over at the health bar, you're able to discern how badly he's hurt based on whether you can see his skin or underlying muscle and bone. Even his clothes rip and tear in a believable way. It doesn't take long for Wolverine to lose his shirt in the course of combat, although he (strangely enough) gains it back upon leveling.

X-Men Origins: Wolverine, despite its movie tie design, actually looks pretty good. While some of the big set pieces don't engender the same slick appeal as the close-quarters combat, hopefully they aren't featured as heavily in the final game. By sticking to the visceral action and making it mesh with a half-decent story, this could end up being one of those rare enjoyable movie tie-ins when it ships next month. Stay tuned for a full review.

Questions or comments? We'd love to hear from you .



Comment on our forums!

Sakura Wars: So Long, My Love Review
Anime fans need apply
Guitar Hero: Van Halen Review
Jamie is, in fact, cryin'.
If you’re thinking of buying this game -- don't.
The pint-sized pyro’s newest adventure has a lot of smoke, but little fire.
The lack of online multiplayer is the only minus to this challenging and engaging puzzle game
Another game joins the pay-what-you-want bundle for Android, Linux, Mac and Windows.
Frime Studio brings its shooter to Kindle's new tablet device.
Popular iOS title hits a major milestone thanks to being released as free-to-play.
Seamus Blackley talks about his newest venture.
Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 Preview
Ultimate Alliance 2 is a sequel to get excited about and we get a hands on look at some of the new fusion powers.
X-Men Origins: Wolverine Preview
Is this the rare movie tie in game that is actually...worth playing?
Descriptions and art related to the cast of characters in Namco Bandai's upcoming PS2 role-playing game.
An inside look at this prequel to Secret of Mana.
We take a look under the hood of this strategy action game that lets players unify ancient Japan.