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- ~One Must Fall
-
- Review by Neil Hopkins
-
- You know me by now - a PC genre snob, looking down my nose at the
- twin staples of the console world, platformers and beat-em-ups.
- Well, I have a small confession to make. I do enjoy the occasional
- platform game - Commander Keen and Jazz Jackrabbit have both enjoyed
- a residency on my hard drive - and now against all the odds I have
- found a beat-em-up that I enjoy.
-
- Why do I hate beat-em-ups so much? The contrived scenarios apart,
- it's just the feel of the things. It's not like any combat that I
- have ever been in involved in - OK, so I've never had a Street Fight
- but I have some experience of Judo and Karate, and I fence
- regularly. The characters do not seem to have any mass, and success
- seems to depend soley on joystick waggling and button thumping.
-
- So why do I like One Must Fall?
-
- For one thing, I'm a sucker for giant Japanese robots and Epic have
- captured the Manga feel to a tee. The graphical style follows
- through from the option screens to the post-match analysis, and
- suits the theme of the game. Likewise the soundtrack is an
- appropriately techno BPM affair, with all the usual thumps, crashes
- and thuds. The sound of a robot being frazzled when it is body
- slammed into the side of the electrified arena makes me wince! The
- way that the screen shakes, the robots reel from repeated blows and
- the sparks and debris that fly from successful strikes lend depth
- and weight to this game.
-
- A comparison with the supposed gore of Mortal Kombat et al is worth
- making. The feeling of desperation as your stunned robot is backed
- into a corner is palpable, something that the flying red pixels and
- ludicrous death moves and combos of other beat-em-ups simply do not
- deliver.
-
- The game play contains the right mix of strategy and tactics,
- particularly in the tournament mode. You need to earn money in a
- series of combats to upgrade your robot to face tougher opponents.
- You also have to pay the repair bill for your robot, which can make
- a nasty dent in your profits! The cut scenes include a pre-fight
- taunt from your opponent, complaints from your chief engineer if
- your robot is badly damaged, and a post match analysis by a TV
- sports commentator which usually is the spur to having just one more
- fight.
-
- That, I think, is the key to the success of One Must Fall - that
- subtle hook of addictive gameplay, that rewards repeated play and
- development of strategy. Compared to the overpriced and overhyped
- Rise of the Robots, One Must Fall is a superb game. Well worth a
- download, or a visit to your local shareware shop, particularly if
- you are the sort of person that doesn't normally play beat-em-ups.
-