A collection of large, interconnected game worlds gives Amazing Mirror a very Metroid-like feel, which is good. The immersive game world isn't the only new feature: there isn't just one Kirby, but four. In a usual game, the player will take pink Kirby off adventuring, and the other three will meander around, probably getting themselves killed. But you can call them to your aid, either to solve a puzzle that requires them or just to give a boss a hard time. Multiple players can split the control of the Kirbies, if you're so inclined.

There are also a few new abilities, like a UFO, and Smash (which replicates Kirby's moves from Super Smash Bros.). It's also got a handful of minigames, and replay-intensive collectible items to keep the fun going for at least a little while longer. It's a fairly short game, but incredibly fun while it lasts.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Good

I wouldn't say it's revolutionary in terms of plot by any means (unless you do some obsessive geography analysis), but the gameplay mechanics and elements it uses and introduces are very enjoyable. I liked it a lot.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Good

Some fun new features, but more or less the same Super Mario 64 with worse controls.

Progress: Beat Bowser

Playing A Game Viewtiful Joe 2 NGC

The charm of the first game is beginning to dissipate, but VJ2 adds enough new stuff and has enough new levels and situations to keep it fresh and fun. The challenge level is great too.

Progress: Adults mode complete

Rating: Good

Two years earlier, Metroid Prime was praised for its conversion of the classic 2D Metroid formula to a 3D, first-person format. The world was beautiful and full of wonder, and the items and enemies were more than just nostalgia; they allowed for a resurrection of tried and true gameplay mechanics. Metroid Prime 2: Echoes completes taking Metroid in a new direction.

Where Prime brought familiarity, Prime 2 brings new ideas. Where Prime preserved convention, Prime 2 reinvents. While MP2 bears more than a little resemblance to MP in how it's played and how to get around, it's somewhat further away from the original Metroid, for better or worse.

The plot of Echoes is at first quite compelling. Samus receives a distress call from a Federation craft, downed on a strange planet called Aether. When she goes to investigate, she gets caught in the planet's violent atmospheric storms, and crash-lands in an odd cave near the origin of the distress beacon; investigation tells the story of a stray Space Pirate frigate, the Federation giving chase, and a series of strange incidents involving the local wildlife.

Aether is a world split in two by a cataclysmic meteor impact. Light Aether, damaged by the rock but still fundamentally unchanged, is populated by the Luminoth, a highly advanced and enlightened people. Dark Aether spawned creatures the Luminoth came to call the 'Ing' whose motives were apparently no deeper than to consume and destroy, bringing the Luminoth near extinction. The meteor brought with it phazon, which in turn attracted the attention of the Space Pirates, who of course brought Metroids with them as power generators. The phazon also attracted a strange, new character - Dark Samus (who the Pirates had initially assumed to be Samus but with an odd penchant for the radioactive ore).

So the Luminoth and the Ing are at odds with one another, the Ing also keep attacking the Space Pirates, Dark Samus is attacking the Space Pirates, and the Federation tries to get involved but gets a little messed up. It sounds interesting enough; unfortunately, that's about as far as it gets. The storyline of Metroid Prime revolved around scanning Pirate logs and Chozo lore, and while Prime 2 does the same (replacing Chozo with Luminoth), within the first few hours all the Pirate logs are already done. After that, the only information left to scan is the lore, which does little but reexplain what's printed on the game box. And if you've played the first Prime (especially if you finished with 100% items), you already know what's up with Dark Samus - in fact, that's the only way to find out, as MP2 gives no further explanation of her. It's massively unfortunate that such a promising plot is completely stale for greater than a contiguous 70% of the game.

After exploring the Federation wreckage, and dispatching of some soldier zombies (and other strange locals), the real game begins when Samus finds the last remaining Luminoth, who's watching over the rest of his species in cryogenic stasis. He tells you of the Ing invasion, that the planet's "energy" was split in two, and that though the Luminoth planned to take energy from the Ing to destroy Dark Aether, the darklings reversed this plan and brought the insect-like Light beings to the brink. An enemy Samus destroys shortly before this point happened to be carrying the item the Luminoth devised to steal the Ing's energy (but which the Ing stole and used against them), so guess who gets to travel to Dark Aether and take the energy back?

The game world is split into four main areas: the central temple area (where Samus crash-lands and where the last remaining Luminoth is), and three tertiary temples. Samus must solve puzzles and defeat massive enemies in both light and dark versions of each temple to steal energy from the Ing, and return it to the Luminoth. Travel between the worlds is managed by portals, which are activated in a variety of ways. Retro hired on one of the key designers from the Super NES Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past to help with the light/dark world duality, and it shows, through the sophisticated nature of world-oriented puzzles.

Unchanged from the first Metroid is the concept of gathering suit and armament upgrades throughout the game. Early on, Samus jumps into the middle of an Ing meeting in Dark Aether she wasn't invited to, and the ensuing melee removes from her a portion of her equipment - though she retains more than she did in the beginning of Metroid Prime, she's still missing some vital components. In addition to defeating enemies to get these upgrades back (Guardian enemies will actually use Samus's outfits against her, such as the Grapple Beam Guardian who tries to catch Samus like a fish, or the Boost Ball Guardian who zooms around the battlefield), she'll also find unique Luminoth upgrades to her power suit, including not only Dark and Light Beams for full offensive capacity, but also new suits and innovative outfits, like an underwater triple-jump/jetpack, and a missile upgrade capable of locking on to five targets at once.

Unfortunately, though the sense of power with these outfits is even greater than previous Metroids - the later upgrades make Samus almost godlike - the temple-oriented aspect of the game is depressingly formulaic. The game is paced well, but the core concept of each temple is to gather three keys with no explanation of what they were made for; a sad cliche for Metroid to come to. The final, fourth temple is also very unsurprising, requiring the gathering of ten additional keys, incredibly similar to the ten artifacts from Metroid Prime (in both games, one key/artifact is already at the gathering site).

Despite the unfortunate keys, however, the rest of the game shows great innovation, and that Retro has learned from and built upon what they did in Metroid Prime. Enemies are very well-designed, and have completely new ways of attacking: the Rezbit, for instance, will disrupt Samus's lock-on capability, and even hack her suit software. Bosses are a real life-or-death struggle, whether in the air, in the water, or towering three stories above Samus, almost filling a gigantic room. The level design is even better than before, with distinctly recognizable and fun-to-navigate desert badlands, swamps, sewers, and a mechanical, electric city in the sky.

The game's art direction is a great reflection of the drama inherent in this new, darker world. Cutscenes show Samus discovering strange new things, or raise new questions entirely. While using the morph ball to infiltrate a Space Pirate base, you can observe the Pirates running into a portal; when encountering a Dark Aether cliffside infested with Dark Metroids, you'll see them carry off hapless victims. Encounters with Dark Samus are the best by far - every time the two Hunters meet each other, it's like the rest of the world stops. Their stances go rigid when their sights meet. Both Samuses raise their arm cannons simultaneously. When you think you've dispatched Dark Samus, you'll backtrack through a corridor and notice that some phazon containers are now missing. In this respect, though the Pirates are put aside early on, the story of the struggle with Dark Samus continues to develop.

Metroid Prime 2 is, in no subtle form, more difficult in every way than its predecessor. While Metroid Prime began in a world full of intrigue and excitement, from the moment Samus's ship crash-lands in MP2, the game world seems dangerous and hell-bent on her destruction. Light world enemies are at about the level of Metroid Prime baddies; their Dark World versions are more like Prime's Hard mode. Being in the dark dimension is harmful by itself, too. The atmosphere is corrosive, and damages Samus if she leaves the protective bubbles of light crystals placed by the Luminoth during their war against the Ing. If you enjoyed clearing rooms of all their enemies in MP, you'll probably find yourself running haphazardly through clearings in MP2 to avoid teams of Dark Pirate Commandos.

Metroid Prime 2 is very complex and very suspenseful (despite the lack of plot through most of it). It also has a multiplayer mode which is neither of these. There are two modes of play, four arenas (two more unlockable after beating the game), and a bunch of weird upgrades, but it all really boils down to shooting the crap out of your friends. One wouldn't think that the forced concessions necessary for multiplayer Metroid Prime could be exceptionally good, but somehow it works, and while not deep by any means, it is surprisingly fun. And if that doesn't convince you, you can roll into a morph ball and launch yourself out of a cannon into other players.

Metroid Prime looked and sounded outstanding, and it wouldn't do for the sequel to be anything less. The environments are spectacularly detailed, everything from enemies to weapon effects look wonderful, sound effects are great, and the soundtrack is masterful (revisiting some classic Metroid series music that Metroid Prime didn't get to). There have been some visual tweaks, such as how the scan visor works, and the two new visors, Dark and Echo, look fantastic. The beauty of the game results in occasional loading stutters when leaving the pause menu, but it's a small price to pay.

One extraneous aspect of the game deserves special mention: the menu system. Metroid Prime 2's menus, both at the title and pause screens, are surprisingly impressive. The menus are three-dimensional, each menu option being a node branching out from the center of a web-like structure. The control stick rotates this structure, and the A button selects whichever option node is closest to the front of the screen. The menu actually has a slight learning curve of its own, but it's brilliant and amazing in its own right.

The replay value of Metroid Prime 2 is similar to that of the first game: unlockable image galleries, a hard mode, and different endings depending on percentage of items collected. There are a lot more galleries this time around, though, and the pause menus conveniently alert you to your overall scan percentage (and percentage in each subsection of scans, such as lore, or pirate logs in lore, or pirate logs in lore from a particular time cycle). And of course the multiplayer is fun to come back to long after the game is over. The length of the game is similar to the first's, ranging between 15 and 25 hours on average.

Metroid Prime 2 is an exhilarating game, and very satisfying in terms of gameplay. While the plot and collection stereotypes are disappointing, the core game is still a delight. It's difficult to rank Echoes in terms of what's classic anymore, but you probably won't be thinking of that during the action- and puzzle-packed game that still fills the Metroid shoes.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Awesome

Space: the final frontier. There's no shortage of games that try to capture the thrill of jetting through the galaxy, or conquering it. Fast-paced space action sims are a dime a dozen. The Escape Velocity series, on the other hand, is rather unique.

Escape Velocity is an open-ended simulation. It has story, it has endings, it has action, adventure, strategy, stealth, humor. Escape Velocity Nova is the third iteration of this concept, and it's easy to see that these guys know what they're doing.

The basic premise of EVN is fairly bare - you are a starship captain setting out from home to broader horizons, and you're free to choose to make a living however you might like. You can trade commodities, go on ferrying or shipping missions, or take "special" jobs. The basic goal of the game is to make money to improve your ship (or buy a new ship), but there are also half a dozen major storylines you have the chance to get involved in, each of which will change the face of the galaxy before it's over. And, there are a bunch of smaller storylines with different rewards, like new ships, or using hypergates.

Though there are new features and abilities, the basic gameplay hasn't changed much since the original Escape Velocity. The game is played from an overhead perspective (as if the galaxy was on a horizontal plane), and you can adjust your ship's acceleration and steering with different controls. Fire primary and secondary weapons, order escorts or wingmen, communicate and dock with ships in space. You can use your hyperdrive to fly from system to system, and land on planets in a system to get or complete missions, or buy upgrades and ships. Random ship placement when you arrive in a system (depending on the state of the galaxy and the system's political standing) gives space travel a fair amount of risk, since you never know when you'll find yourself between two warring fleets, or in the crosshairs of a pirate.

Although still two-dimensional and not extremely sophisticated by today's standards, Nova has a good bit of eye candy and a gripping visual appeal, especially when flying your spacecraft around and watching its booster jets flare in and out. Sound effects are mostly unchanged from the first game so long ago, and there is no music, so you're best off playing some tunes of your own during your jaunts through the galaxy.

Escape Velocity has always been about replay. You can try to stick straight with the storylines, but it's easier, and more fun, to at least occasionally go on sidequest missions or just explore. The galaxy is big, and filled with mystery. And even when you've mapped the entire galaxy, even when you've finished a story, the game never ends: you have as much time as you want to keep earning money for that giant battleship, which you can use to conquer planets if you so desire. There's an endless amount of things to do in EVN, if you're up to it. Not to mention the game's expandability and modifiability through plug-ins.

As with its two predecessors, Nova is fun to play, and has a lasting factor hard to compete with. If you like open-ended games, you'll probably like EVN. It's free for a certain trial period (with some limitations), so you may as well give it a shot.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Good
Playing A Game Metroid Prime NGC

With its creation on the NES, and sequels on Game Boy and Super NES, the Metroid series has enjoyed a great deal of success for its conceptual genius: Samus Aran, intergalactic bounty hunter, is placed on a vast world and must work through it room by room, solving puzzles, upgrading her power suit, and defeating enemies. Several years had passed after the release of Super Metroid, and fans of the series anxiously awaited the announcement of another sequel; they got it with quite a bit of surprise.

The previous Metroids (as well as a fourth Metroid game, Metroid Fusion, made for the GBA) were 2D side-scrollers. Much of the gameplay relied on this concept. Metroid Prime, for the Gamecube, was not only to be three-dimensional, but also played from a first-person perspective. Fans were worried that it would make the game into a mindless FPS fragfest - luckily, they were mistaken. Metroid Prime is now the proud definition of the modern "First Person Adventure" genre.

Metroid Prime's plot is deep enough to keep a sense of mystique and intrigue about the game, but never so much that you can't understand what's going on. The plot is revealed not through cutscenes or dialogue (as there's really no one to talk to), but through Samus's Scan Visor, which can be used to download log information from computer consoles and other sources. From her start aboard the Space Pirate frigate Orpheon in orbit around Tallon IV, Samus will scan Pirate Logs, Chozo Lore, and other items to uncover some of the seedy mysteries of the planet, and even of herself.

Though it may look like it at first, Metroid Prime is not a first-person shooter (and if it were, it wouldn't be a very good one). Sure, there is shooting involved, but the strategic elements and puzzles greatly outweigh the enemies Samus is obligated to waste. She'll gather a number of upgrades to the power suit throughout the game, including more powerful and resilient suits (one allows her to survive in extreme temperatures; the next allows her to move better underwater), more armaments (including wave beam, ice beam, missiles, and bombs), and special abilities (such as a double-jump, a grappling beam, and rolling into the morph ball). The visor plays a big role in Metroid Prime: different view visors let you see things differently - the Thermal Visor sees heat, and the X-ray Visor can see some otherwise invisible things. These different ways of seeing the same level are used sometimes to detect enemies (or their weak points), but more often for finding critical puzzle elements, like a hidden electric switch.

The game's controls are a bit confusing at first, and definitely aren't what you'd find in an FPS (which is why many shooter fans are uncomfortable with Metroid Prime), but as the game progresses the movement, strafing, jumping, and lock-on mechanics become very intuitive. Which is good, because a mastery of the game's controls is necessary for not only defeating enemies and bosses, but also in puzzle solving and exploration, trying to solve the mysteries of a room and searching for hidden secrets in the game's massive, cohesive world.

Another of Prime's victories is visual presentation. The environments evoke the exact sense that they should, from a disgusting pool of poisoned water and plants, to the majesty of a great natural tower of ice, to the intrigue of an artificial Space Pirate research lab; and the graphical effects, from Samus's visor being hit by rain droplets to the explosive effects of different weapons and enemies, are perfectly executed. Sound effects fit the game like a glove, a complete sensory enhancement to the game. The musical ambience is a joy to listen to, through calm, exciting, or mysterious tracks.

The replay value of Metroid Prime is great; not only is the game of a fairly respectable length and size (easily over 20 hours for a first-timer), but there are a bunch of non-required items to collect. A number of upgrades you don't really need can affect your completion percentage (most notably, missile expansions and energy tanks). There are three different endings, depending on how many items you gathered before the final boss. The game has four image galleries packed in for the player to unlock, each with different requirements. After beating the game, you unlock a Hard mode, where you're twice as weak and enemies are twice as hard. And, there are connection bonuses with Metroid Fusion: beat Prime, and you can play it with the Fusion suit; beat Fusion, and you can play the original Metroid (for NES) on your Gamecube. The Fusion suit doesn't affect Prime's gameplay at all, but it does look neat.

Metroid Prime is a triumph of a game. Wonderfully presented, flawlessly executed, an exercise for both mind and thumbs; aimlessly exploring the game's incredible world is half the fun. Prime is nothing short of a masterpiece.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Awesome

After the release of the Super NES smash hit Super Mario RPG, fans eagerly awaited some form of sequel. Rumors of Nintendo hiring people to work on SMRPG 2 fueled speculation and anxiety for years before Nintendo released Paper Mario for the N64.

It was far, far from what anyone expected. Paper Mario was a fun adventure, and had great innovation, but lacked a certain flair and charm. A lot of people had no trouble putting the game down halfway through and never returning. Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door corrected this.

Super Mario RPG showed that a good Mario story didn't have to revolve around Bowser, and Paper Mario made it evident that this was in fact a good idea for anything but a twitch game. Paper Mario 2 has Bowser in it, and you do fight him, but the main villain is of another force entirely: the X-Nauts. The game begins with Princess Peach enjoying her vacation in the dingy town of Rogueport, purchasing a mystical item from a shady street vendor. Thus she comes into the possession of a map, said to lead to the greatest treasure in all the world. She sends for Mario to come to her aid in finding the treasure, but by the time he gets there, Peach is gone.

In Mario's quest to find Peach, he'll unravel the mysteries of the treasure, and collect mystical items known as the Crystal Stars which grant their owners great power. Mario will have to traverse a number of different areas (via sewer pipe), defeat great monsters, and contend with the X-Nauts to save her. The game is separated into eight chapters, inbetween which you'll play short segments as Peach (trapped in the X-Naut fortress) and Bowser (trying to catch up with Mario). The story development is solid, and you'll meet a number of interesting characters along the way. The humor in the story is great, especially when Luigi gets involved.

Thousand-Year Door plays just like Paper Mario, but with a few extra features. Outside of battle it's somewhat like a platformer, where you can run (with depth) and jump, enter buildings, climb staircases, and talk to non-player characters. Mario can use special paper powers, like turning sideways to go in narrow vertical passages, or folding into a plane to fly across a room. The battle system is turn-based, and highly timing-oriented, that is by doing actions at the right time attacks will do more damage or enemy hits can be deflected. This timing concept isn't as evident as it was in Mario & Luigi: Superstar Saga, but it still manages to make battles interesting. Badges are also back, which Mario equips to make various enhancements in battle or gain new moves. When Mario levels up, he has the option to get more HP, more FP, or more BP (badges consume Badge Points by being equipped).

As in Paper Mario, your party in battle consists of two characters: Mario and a sidekick. The sidekick can be switched out midbattle, and there are over half a dozen of them which Mario will meet throughout the game. There are three attack dynamics: regular attacks, power attacks (which consume flower points), and special attacks (which consume star points). Star points are regenerated in battle through the biggest new addition to Thousand-Year Door, the audience. Impressive moves will wow the audience, whose applause increases your stars. Poor performance, like being hit without defending or doing a poorly-timed attack, will prompt people to leave the audience. It's an interesting method which can make for some really dramatic battles.

Despite the fact that all of Thousand-Year Door's characters are definitively two-dimensional, the game is very visually sophisticated. Buildings collapse when Mario enters them. Visual effects, like water, are breathtakingly beautiful. Sound effects are straight from the Mario sound archives. The soundtrack is great, all the music is very well-composed.

There are a handful of replay facets as well. Thousand-Year Door has a massive vault of badges to collect and use. There's one optional sidekick, and a bunch of optional stuff (from items to dialogue) to investigate, which you can do once you beat the final game (play can continue after this). And there's a casino with crazy minigames to play whenever you please.

Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door is a brilliant game. Fairly long (easily greater than 30 hours), with a highly amusing story, and a fun battle system with its own share of difficulty, the game is a blast to play and one of the most fun quasi-RPGs to date.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Awesome
Playing A Game X-Men Legends NGC

Marvel's X-Men have long been some of the most famous comic book heroes, spawning an endless supply of merchandise over the years. Many games have been made with the X-Men before, but few cut the mustard. One notable exception was the arcade beat-em-up - you and up to three other players going medieval on the asses of Magneto's thugs.

Legends returns to that formula, adding in a more robust ability system, and an action RPG backbone to make your characters visibly more powerful over time. Having mutant powers was never quite so fun.

The story of X-Men Legends is a lot like the first X-Men movie: there's a girl with mutant powers (Alison, later known as Magma), Magneto and the Brotherhood of Mutants try to kidnap her, the X-Men save her, a series of investigations into suspicious activity from the Brotherhood reveals their true plans (for which Magneto wanted to use Magma), and the X-Men must stop them. The plot is somewhat different, and the storyline takes a number of departures from it, but the idea is nothing new. Most of the beginning of the story moves rather slow, but towards the end it's actually somewhat interesting.

Conceptually, X-Men Legends has a portal-like overworld and a mission-based gameplay system. However, the "overworld" is so trivial that it's really just a series of missions with short intermissions. After the initial level, every mission can be played by up to four players, each controlling a different X-Man. The game is playable by any lower number of people though; the extra guys are AI-controlled, and you can switch between them on the fly with the D-pad. The AI is capable in some situations, but dumb in others, so it's useful to manually guide them through some obstacles. The AI is partially customizable on a per-character basis; if someone's using too much mutant power or being too headstrong, you can adjust appropriately.

Each mutant has a punch attack, a kick attack, a grab/throw, and four special mutant powers (Iceman for instance has a straight freeze blast, an ice projectile attack, an ice armor, and a special move freezing nearby enemies). Each character gains experience from killing enemies. Experience is shared among the characters in play, and characters not in play receive experience at half this rate. When a character levels up, he/she gets a stat point and an ability point, which you use in a pause menu to increase the character's statistics (attack, speed/defense, health, and mutant energy) and abilities (which, aside from the four special moves, also include passive skills like more powerful regular attacks). Interspersed throughout levels are blue Extraction Points, at which you can save the game or switch your characters - you can have any four mutants on the field at once, but by the end there are over a dozen you can choose from.

The most impressive part of X-Men Legends is the environments. Almost everything is 100% destructible. Cars, phone booths, chairs, even walls can be pounded away. You can toss enemies into destructible objects to do more damage, and even pick up some objects and toss them at enemies. Colossus can pick up military transport trucks and hurl them like a child's plaything.

Legends is not however without flaws. Awkward beginning controls and unanticipated ramps in difficulty result in a lot of deaths through the first parts of the game, and death is fairly difficult to get over - the character is gone until you get to an extraction point, where you can either replace him or revive him at a cost (you collect a form of currency from downed enemies sometimes, which you can also use to buy useless items). There are also a lot of glitches, like chairs getting stuck in ceilings, or enemies becoming spontaneously invincible.

The game is good to look at. All the characters, enemies, and environments are well rendered, and effects and explosions light up the screen excellently. Sound effects can get on your nerves, but usually aren't too bad. You'll barely notice the music, as it's too muted and uninteresting to grab the player's attention.

X-Men Legends promises a fair amount of replay, in extras on beating the game and optional bonuses like comic book covers, but it's marred by the fact that you can't return to stages you previously beat. If not for that, it would be fun simply to go back and level up characters more, but, no.

In the end, Legends is a blast to play: beat people up, unleash awesome mutant powers, and wreak havoc on incredibly destructible environments, potentially with three of your friends along for the ride. But there are also flies in the ointment, like glitches and the inability to backtrack between stages. It's fun, but don't be surprised when you get frustrated at certain parts of the game.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Good

Released to coincide with (and probably to leech popularity from) Prince of Persia: The Sands of Time, Sphinx and the Cursed Mummy promised two inventive new games in one. Sphinx, the game's protagonist, is a sword-wielding warrior of ancient Egypt. The cursed mummy of Prince Tutankhamen, Sphinx's sidekick, takes advantage of death by using his invulnerable corpse to solve puzzles.

The half-action, half-puzzle combination sounded interesting - unfortunately, the actual product doesn't quite live up to those measurements. As a game, Sphinx succeeds at little, and fails at much.

The game is set in ancient Egypt, but not the one in our history books. This Egypt is populated with mystical creatures, magical artifacts, and arcane powers which rule the land. The story begins as Imhotep, sage denizen of Heliopolis, sends his disciples Sphinx and Horus on a dangerous mission. The apprentices are to recover the Blade of Osiris from its hiding place in the Uruk, a land overcome with darkness. In the process, Horus is lost (to become a plot device later), and Sphinx uncovers some strange goings-on. Meanwhile, Prince Tutankhamen is preparing for his birthday party, and is caught in a trap to destroy him - separating his (somehow mummified) body from his soul.

The culprit behind all of this is Set, lord of evil, and the ultimate goal of the game is to bring Set's plans of conquest to an end. The game makes a number of allusions to Egyptian culture, but usually in nothing more than name. It also gets into the mythology aspect a bit with an explanation of Ra, Osiris, and Set, but this doesn't happen until the game is nearly over anyway. On that note, Sphinx has possibly the worst ending of any video game, ever. The final dialogue is trite and boring, though most of the game isn't much better (it just sounds weird for the king of darkness to confront the hero with the phase "You! You're the one who's been annoying me lately!"), and there are sequel hints that make most Hollywood movies look subtle.

The gameplay of Sphinx is divided as its title suggests - part of the time you'll be playing as Sphinx, and the other part as the cursed mummy Tutankhamen. Unfortunately, Sphinx's sections (which make up not half, but closer to 75% of the game) are sloppy, often uninspired adventure segments throughout the land of Heliopolis to fetch certain powerful items. His quests are made into puzzles, simply by virtue of the destinations being so unclear that half the challenge is finding out what the challenge is supposed to be. This is not to say Sphinx is completely worthless: some of his levels have moments of genius. But shoddy controls and poor design ruin a lot of it.

The real fun is in the mummy segments. His levels take place inside Uruk castle, which itself is filled to the brim with not enemies, but traps and puzzles. The mummy solves these puzzles through the use of his own wrappings - since he's functionally invincible, he can be lit on fire, electrocuted, flattened, cut into pieces, even transmogrified into a bat. The mummy's levels are extremely dense, each room several puzzles in one. The dynamics and design of these levels are remarkably clever; the only downside is that there aren't more of them.

Graphically, Sphinx really brings nothing new to the table. Most modern 3D adventure games have visuals at least as polished. Sound effects aren't terribly surprising either, with a mixture of fitting and awkward. The production's real triumph, aside from the mummy, is its soundtrack. The score's composition is so exquisite, the sound so eloquent, it's a shame that the game's dynamic music blending suffers from so many glitches (those aren't the only bugs, either - in fact, there's a fatal flaw about halfway through the game, where if you save at a certain location, quit, and come back, the rest of the game is incompletable).

Sphinx can easily be beaten in around or under 15 hours, with only another one or two hours if you do all the "sidequests" (consisting almost entirely of an unrewarding museum monster-collection task). There are minigames to play, but most of them become boring halfway through the first round. And since the game is completely linear, there's really not much replay value at all.

It isn't a total failure. The mummy parts of the game are a joy to play, and the music is melodic and catchy, but one wonders if it's worth the effort. Sphinx and the Cursed Mummy is a menagerie of ideas gone mostly wrong. If you want to submit yourself to the Sphinx levels for the sake of playing the mummy's puzzles, knock yourself out; but if you're looking for a well-rounded game, look elsewhere.

Progress: Complete

Rating: Bad