Star Fox Adventures (Players' Choice GameCube)
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8 new or used available from £4.65
Average customer review:Product Description
After piloting the Arwing starfighter in the first two Star Fox games, Fox McCloud touches down on Dinosaur Planet for his first adventure outside the cockpit. Many missions still involve the aerial Arwing combat and dogfighting that the sly Star Fox series is known for, but the game pumps up the variety by allowing you to explore on foot and use magical attacks. Armed with an enchanted staff, Fox will be able to battle against the mutated dinosaurs led by local tyrant General Scales. But not all of the planet's dinosaurs are enemies; Fox will also team up with the prehistoric Price Tricky. As Fox jets across the skies or traverses the vast planet on foot, his showdowns with the planet's enemies offer an action-packed gaming experience.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #6881 in Computer & Video Games
- Brand: Nintendo
- Released on: 2003-10-10
- Platform: GameCube
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.co.uk Review
Fox McCloud is back, but he's left the on-the-rails shoot-'em-up larks of his previous two games behind--this all-new Star Fox adventure sees the super furry animal in a very Zelda-esque bid to save Dinosaur Planet.
Star Fox Adventures is the first, and sadly last, GameCube game from Nintendo stalwarts Rare, who previously created such N64 classics as GoldenEye 007 and Conker's Bad Fur Day. It's their last game for the GameCube because Nintendo have recently sold their shares in the company to Microsoft, which has caused an unholy stink from fans around the world and created even more anticipation for this game.
Although the control system is very similar to The Legend of Zelda's, Star Fox Adventures is no simple clone. It's your job as the mercenary mammal to find all the spellstones that will rejoin the splintered planet and defeat the evil General Scales. This entails much exploring of ancient temples and completing of sub-quests to help everything from Yorkshire-accented woolly mammoths to pterodactyls who've lost their babies.
The game may lack the epic scale and endless invention of Zelda but it has plenty of new ideas of its own, including a fully interactive dinosaur sidekick, some cool shoot-'em-up sections in Fox's spaceship, and lots of ways to upgrade your magical staff. To add some icing to the cake the graphics are absolutely amazing, particularly the super-realistic fur effects. So don't feel down that Rare are leaving, just enjoy their parting shot and let it whet your appetite for the new Zelda game coming from Nintendo in 2003. --David Jenkins
Computer and Video Games Magazine
"Looks beautiful and has hours of play time. 8/10."
Manufacturer's Description
Star Fox Adventures is an epic action-adventure game with great gameplay variety and cutting-edge graphics. As the mysterious Fox, players will try to save the prehistoric paradise known as Dinosaur Planet from the evil General Scales. Eight years after the defeat of Andross chronicled in StarFox 64, the Star Fox team has moved on to new roles: Slippy in Weapon Tech Development, supplying Fox with the latest gadgets and equipment; Peppy in Mission Support, always ready with a welcome word of advice; and Rob The Robot, a cyborg quartermaster in charge of mission supplies. Still unknown is whether Falco will return from his hot-shot solo career to lend Fox a hand.
New characters like sidekick Prince Tricky add to the depth of the Star Fox universe. A small triceratops with a big mouth, Prince Tricky is determined to help out, whether Fox wants him or not. Prince Tricky can perform certain tasks that Fox cannot, such as digging holes and breathing fire. Most intriguing of all is Crystal, a mysterious female character captured by a primeval force known only as Krazoa. Dinosaur Planet teems with many other dinosaurs with whom Fox must interact in his epic quest.
Some portions of the game deliver classic Star Fox action, in which players pilot Fox's Arwing through dangerous asteroid fields and dog-fight with other ace pilots. When Fox deplanes for the uncharted wilds of Dinosaur Planet, he wields the Crystal Staff in martial-arts battles with ferocious foes. Fox can also use his staff to fire long-range magical attacks.
Customer Reviews
Rare's Farewell Kiss To Nintendo's Gamers
It is a beauty of a game both in terms of Graphics and Gameplay.
The first thing you might perhaps notice while playing the game(especially if you played Mario Sunshine first) is the distinct lack of a jump button. At first this irritated me; when running to and fro I like to break the monotony by jumping about. After a while I saw a good reason for the lack of a jump button - the game doesn't become a simply jump fest. The game is (thankfully) not a test of your ability to perform jumping moves.
Gamelay wise - I found it a bit slow to begin with but, once it picked up pace it became rip-roaringly good fun. I liked the story (even though it was a bit of a cliché fest - hardened soldier-type has a soft-spot in his heart for those at need etc) and the voice acting wasn't atrocious which is always a plus. The puzzles aren't amazingly difficult so they will generally be solvable for the younger and elder gamers among us.
Something else you might notice about the gameplay if you are a nintendo fan - it is stunningly like the Nintendo 64's The Ocarina of Time. The upgrades - the battle sequences - this is not a bad thing!
There were some things that I wish they included more of - the flying sections. Starfox always was a flying game. I have enjoyed the foray into 3D Platforming but it would have been nice to have more than the odd few-minute flying segment thrown in (especially when the system is good enough to be a game in itself!). It would also be better if the game had more of a lastibility to it. Once you're throw with it (as with most platformers, I guess), you're probably not going to keep going back to it.
The saddest feature of this game is the fact that it is Rare's last effort for nintendo for a long time (who knows? They could return!). Upon finishing it, you are left with a slight depression - all good things come to an end.
Well - my summary:
Graphics - 95%
Sound - 80%
Gameplay - 90%
Lastibility - 80%
Overall - 86
Actually the BEST GAME IN THE WORLD!!
Ok, maybe not the best game, but it's well up there. Starfox is full of character, the other characters he meets are fantastic, and its just a brilliant game that doesn't deserve the flak its getting here.
Those who mourned the end of Super Mario Sunshine are well advised to get this game. Its short, but fantastic the whole way.
An absolute joy to play. I love starfox.
Rare leave Nintendo with a BANG!
As many know, this was the last game by Rare for Nintendo, and like most Rare games, it's great.
The game see's you as Fox Mcloud, essentially a man for hire who lands on the dinosaur planet to help the general population from the evil dinosaurs.
The game plays like a Legend Of Zelda game, which is good news as the control system is class with a good lock on feature. The graphics are sublime and some of the best i have seen, with realisitc fur effects and the settings are beatifully created.
Coupled with the Arwing flying sections, everything sounds great...
But then you get the tediousness of it, in some sections you can't leave an area untill you found aload of small obscur things that make no difference to the game. Along with your sidekick Tricky, he can be helfull but he can be a pain, and where has Falco gone to?, he wasn't included in the game!, also there isn't enough unlockable features.
Despite the obvious downsides, on the players choice range you can afford to have this sitting in your Gamecube, at least for a while.




