Product Details
The X Factor Interactive DVD Game [2007]

The X Factor Interactive DVD Game [2007]
From FremantleMedia Home Entertainment

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Product Description

The best interactive DVD Game from the best talent show The X Factor! This is a music and X Factor trivia game to test all ages and decide: have you got what it takes? This DVD is packed with auditions, the judges' most memorable moments, unseen footage and is great for music and X Factor fans alike. It includes clips from all 4 series. Fearne Cotton (The Xtra Factor host) brings the game alive and makes you feel like part of the show every time you play! The interactive quiz tests your skill as a judge in the Auditions and then takes you through to Bootcamp, the Judges' Homes, the Live Shows and, if you're good enough, The Grand Final. The aim of the game is to score points in Rounds 1-3 and then reach The Grand Final in Round 4. Answer questions correctly and you stand a chance of winning a fantastic prize including backstage passes to The X Factor Live tour 2008!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #5438 in DVD
  • Released on: 2007-11-26
  • Rating: Exempt
  • Formats: Animated, Dolby, PAL, Widescreen
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 120 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Synopsis
An interactive version of the hugely successful television programme. Quizzing participant's knowledge of music trivia and the show itself, this title uses footage from THE X FACTOR and is hosted by Fearne Cotton. Allows players to be a judge and test their own abilities as a music mogul.


Customer Reviews

Good fun for its short lifespan3

Although obviously aimed at X Factor fans this game does have enough general music questions to keep the occasional viewer entertained.

It's entirely endorsed by the producers of the program, so we have the real X Factor music, the four current judges Louis Walsh, Sharon Osbourne, Danni Minogue and Simon Cowell, and the cheekily happy Fearne Cotton keeps the whole thing moving at a good pace. She reads out all the questions throughout the game and changes her outfit for each new round.

The game can be played by up to 4 players (I'm not sure why one person would play on their own?) and is quite simple, but that's not to criticise, for its appeal is in its simplicity. To win the game you have to answer questions correctly (using your DVD remote), getting a few bonus points along the way, and hopefully ending up in the Grand Final. The first one to get there and answer the Grand Final question correctly wins. It's as simple as that. A brief explanation of the 4 rounds is as follows:

Round 1. THE AUDITIONS

Fearne shows us a 10 second clip, taken from any of the previous X Factor Series, and asks us to guess whether the performer made it to Boot Camp. Guess correctly and you get a point, get it wrong and Fearne tells you off. Some of the clips are hilariously bad.

Round 2. BOOTCAMP

Once at Bootcamp you are given a category (Groups, 25+, etc) and again have to answer questions, but this time they are multi choice and are based on general music knowledge as well as X Factor based.

Round 3. JUDGES HOMES

Here you retain your allocated category and answer multi choice questions against the clock, having 5 seconds to make your guess. This is a good round for speeding up the game.

Round 4. LIVE SHOWS

In this final round you are in danger of going out. Answer incorrectly and the judges decide your fate. This part is a bit disappointing, for the judges `decision' is no more than a short clip of them voting off, or keeping in, an act from one of the X Factor Finals. If they stay, you stay, and if they get voted out so do you. Game over.

The aim is to earn ten points from 5 questions - you can select from easy (1 point), medium (2 points) or hard (3 points) - and if you reach Week Ten, The Grand X Factor Final, simply answer the final question to win the game.

Yes, the game is for X Factor fans, and yes it will be short-lived because that's all we require of this type of game. Two players can finish it in under half an hour, and the chattering Fearne Cotton does a great job of keeping the whole thing lightheartedy skipping along (the judges clearly needed no input as all their clips and comments are from previous shows).

Good lighthearted fun.

Judge for yourself3
I must admit, I don't go to any great lengths to watch X-Factor on a weekly basis. It's not that I don't like it, just that I'm not an avid fan. However, a game where you can become a judge as well as taking part in a music quiz sounded like a good idea.

The DVD Game can be played in most standard DVD players and has a simple system where you use the remote to answer questions, passing it round to the next player on their turn. There are several unique sections to the game; The auditions, which is the part that sees you as a judge, the `boot-camp', individual Judge sections and lastly the final.

All but the first section involve asking questions on both X-factor contestants and pop trivia. As such it's a bit of a mixed bag and you'll find different people have strengths in each area, which can make for quite an interesting competition at times. The first section, the one I was looking forward to, isn't really about you judging the auditions, though. It's a simple case of guessing who got through. A bit disappointing. The last section gives you harder and harder questions as you go through the knock-out rounds, but I found it to be a bit of a mixed bag when it came to what our team could answer.

The overall presentation of the game is, like the programme, quite slick. All the presenters have recorded video which makes it feel more like you are there on the programme, the other video such as X-Factor contestants singing is of a high standard. Questions are easily answered with the remote (well, they were with my remote, anyway) and it's always obvious what to do. There's even a good little guide to how to play, in case you can't work it out.

Overall, the package is well put-together but suffers from not really providing what it promises, a true X-Factor experience. What it does do, though, is entertaining enough, even if it boils down to a good quality pop trivia quiz with a few added bells and whistles.

Only for x-factor fans...and only just!3
This interactive DVD game is great for X-factor devotees (those who have watched the series since its first airing) but as for the rest of us, we'll be left out in the cold.

There are 4 'rounds' in this game that can be played by up to four people (it can be played on your own but it's even less fun!). The first round asks competitors to 'judge' a number of acts - you're shown a clip of an auditionee and have to guess whether the panel put them through to Boot camp. I thought this would be the best bit of the game but i found it rather boring, especially seeing as my opinion often didn't coincide with the judges'! It was unpredictable which I suppose is true to the show but it's not a case of YOU judging the acts...it's a case of you guessing the JUDGES judgement!

The following three rounds involve answering multiple choice questions, some are about previous X-factor contestants or shows and some are about music in general. There is a broad range of questions but obviously those who don't watch the show will only be any good at the general music trivia! The final round, the 'live final', fails to generate the tension and excitement i'd hoped for. The slow DVD and the repetitive responses of the judges and Fearn Cotton (presenter) have much to answer for. What's more, if you get a question wrong in your attempt to reach 'week 10' of the 'live final', your survival in the game depends not on your knowledge but on a previous x-factor contestant's success! All well and good, having a bit of 'pot luck', but when it's the early 'weeks' of the last round you know you're going to get through, whereas in the final 'weeks' it seems your contestant always gets kicked off the show! Furthermore it's a bit obvious, when you see a clip of previous winner Shayne Ward, that your place in the game is safe...you know darn well he didn't ever get voted off!

OK, so the game is a bit repetitive, the questions are good for devotees of the show but nobody else, and the format fails to inspire. However, if you're a family of x-factor addicts and you're after something to while away the hours then this would be a fine game to add to your collection.