A long LOTR game that's fun and will pass the time nicely, 14 junio 2005
Author:
mOVIemAN56
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Lord of the Rings: The Third Age hasn't gotten some bad rap from some
who have played it. They said the game was to slow, the voice acting
was bad, or anything else the could think of. I've read the books, seen
all three films, an played most of the games released since 2001. LOTR:
The Third Age is more RPG-style then action game and this hurts it on
some levels and strengthens it on others.
Instead of being Aragorn or Frodo you're the Gondorian Knight Berethor
sent by the Steward of Gondor to find the ring and his son. Along the
way you're confronted by Gandalf and told that the Stewards mind is
corrupt and Gandalf gives you a new mission. To help the Fellowship in
its quest. From here you'll meet an Elf of Lothlorien, a Dwarf of
Moria, and various other characters to help you in your quest. You'll
go from the Mines of Moria, to the plains of Rohan, to the White City.
Intersecting with the game are about a hundred or so cut scenes from
the films all featuring the voice of Ian McKellen. The thing I liked
about this film is the way it takes you around all of Middle Earth. You
go to Moria, Rohan, Rivendell, Gondor, it's quite an adventure. The
creators could have thought up a little better story line then just
some random guy helping Gandalf. The voice-acting is fine and the
graphics are top-notch bit one problem I did have was enemy difficulty.
Even if your on easy it is nearly impossible to kill some bosses, the
Balrog above all others and the way that characters just randomly join
you was not well-planned.
The game is fun though and you will most likely enjoy yourself. Some
parts are weak but the visuals are stunning and the outline of the game
flows well with the characters.
The Lord of the Rings: The Third Age. Featuring the voices of:
Christopher Lee, Ian McKellen, Lori Phillips, and Chris Edgerly.
Flow: 4/5
Difficulty:2/5
Design: 4/5
Overall: 3 1/2 out of 5 Stars
14 out of 31 people found the following comment useful :- Doesn't break the LOTR licence trend one bit, 15 mayo 2005
Author:
mentalcritic de Southern Hemisphere
In other words, the game is based around unbalanced play, annoying
repetition, an over-reliance on the power of recognition, and little
else. This is especially sad, given that the game had so much potential
to be more. Unfortunately, EA Games has long had the attitude of "who
cares if it is good? It has Brand X on it, it will sell!". They killed
the Command & Conquer franchise with this attitude, and it looks as if
they intend to milk every last drop from The Lord Of The Rings without
changing it one little bit. To its credit, the Final Fantasy-style
combat structure does manage to engage the player for the first couple
of realms, but it all goes downhill in a hurry after that. This is not
surprising when one considers that the game was made by EA, who have
long shown no interest in what happens to the player's sense of
enjoyment once they have money. It is difficult to believe that this is
the same company that produced such innovations as California Games.
The Third Age's plot, such as it is, revolves around a party of
adventurers who follow something of a similar path to the Fellowship
depicted in the film trilogy. Therein lies the first mistake of the
game. By following the films too closely, it inherits all the mistakes.
Gone are all the truly interesting aspects of Tolkien's universe, only
to be replaced by long, tedious strolls through very linear mazes, or
equally tedious battle events, which pop up so frequently during the
aforementioned walks that it is a wonder epileptics haven't shown
violent reactions. More interesting to note is the promise of authentic
footage from the films to pick up as a bonus during the game. It would
have been nice if this had meant footage that viewers of the films in
any form have not seen at least three times already. Sadly, it does
not. Not only is footage from the film all they show, so little is used
that one can expect to see each segment, in different edits, at least a
dozen times.
But the real evidence that EA Games did not do their homework lies in
the battle sequences. The biggest problem with them, in a nutshell, is
balance. Early on in the game, it is possible to win the most difficult
combats if one keeps their head on right and focuses on strategy. It is
not until we get to Rohan, however, that the balance problem really
comes out to attack. I would be willing to bet generously that if one
were to take a couple of hundred hours worth of footage of people
playing this game, then edit everything out bar the missed strikes,
missed strikes from the player characters would outnumber those of the
CPU characters by a factor of at least ten to one. I realise it is hard
to program a margin of human error into an artificial intelligence, but
this goes way beyond unbalanced. This is what those of us who remember
the good old days when games had only gameplay to rely upon call
rigged. I am going to keep saying it until either I die or they listen,
but between making a short game and making one that feels rigged after
a mere few hours' play, making the short game is the smarter choice.
Unfortunately, this rigged feel just keeps building and building until
it reaches truly ludicrous heights. It is possible to even reach
situations where all of your characters are low enough on health that a
singular blow may kill them, but the enemy has stolen enough health
from your characters that it is as if they never received a scratch.
Couple this with the aforementioned miss/dodge ratio, and you can see
that this game has big problems. Indeed, it is only because I kept my
temper and purchased an Action Replay program in order to swing the
balance back to something that approximates fairness that I have not
thrown this disc at a nearby road. During the Minas Tirith sequences,
it is utterly impossible to win combats without doing this. The use of
blows that take the balance of turn sequencing away doesn't help,
either.
All of this would be forgivable if the characters were likable enough
to make the player care about their personal quests. They accomplish
this to some extent. While the lead hero gets boring, even childish
after a while, the saving grace with the characters is Hadhod, the
Dwarf. Perhaps EA were trying to atone for the appalling racist Dwarf
caricature of the film trilogy by proxy. Either way, if they had
focused on this character during the game rather than the
beaten-to-death Men or Elves, this might have made the story vaguely
compelling. As it is, the rest of the cast have about as much depth as
an episode of Neighbours, and often a delivery to match. I realise that
voice actors for video games almost always record their voiceovers
before they get to see any game footage, but even if they have to
deliver the most stilted of dialogue, they could at least try to sound
like warriors in combat rather than a bunch of excited schoolchildren.
After playing through the game in about 45 hours, I have to say that I
am incredibly reluctant to approach it again. It just doesn't work, and
that's simply appalling. Tolkien adaptations in the digital realm have
not progressed one inch since the days when The Hobbit was first
rendered as a text-based adventure for the Vic-20. Licensors such as EA
Games should hang their heads in shame for that.
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The Lord of the Rings: The Third Age (2004) (VG)
A long LOTR game that's fun and will pass the time nicely, 14 junio 2005
Author: mOVIemAN56
*** This comment may contain spoilers ***
Lord of the Rings: The Third Age hasn't gotten some bad rap from some who have played it. They said the game was to slow, the voice acting was bad, or anything else the could think of. I've read the books, seen all three films, an played most of the games released since 2001. LOTR: The Third Age is more RPG-style then action game and this hurts it on some levels and strengthens it on others.
Instead of being Aragorn or Frodo you're the Gondorian Knight Berethor sent by the Steward of Gondor to find the ring and his son. Along the way you're confronted by Gandalf and told that the Stewards mind is corrupt and Gandalf gives you a new mission. To help the Fellowship in its quest. From here you'll meet an Elf of Lothlorien, a Dwarf of Moria, and various other characters to help you in your quest. You'll go from the Mines of Moria, to the plains of Rohan, to the White City.
Intersecting with the game are about a hundred or so cut scenes from the films all featuring the voice of Ian McKellen. The thing I liked about this film is the way it takes you around all of Middle Earth. You go to Moria, Rohan, Rivendell, Gondor, it's quite an adventure. The creators could have thought up a little better story line then just some random guy helping Gandalf. The voice-acting is fine and the graphics are top-notch bit one problem I did have was enemy difficulty. Even if your on easy it is nearly impossible to kill some bosses, the Balrog above all others and the way that characters just randomly join you was not well-planned.
The game is fun though and you will most likely enjoy yourself. Some parts are weak but the visuals are stunning and the outline of the game flows well with the characters.
The Lord of the Rings: The Third Age. Featuring the voices of: Christopher Lee, Ian McKellen, Lori Phillips, and Chris Edgerly.
Flow: 4/5
Difficulty:2/5
Design: 4/5
Overall: 3 1/2 out of 5 Stars
14 out of 31 people found the following comment useful :-
Doesn't break the LOTR licence trend one bit, 15 mayo 2005
Author: mentalcritic de Southern Hemisphere
In other words, the game is based around unbalanced play, annoying repetition, an over-reliance on the power of recognition, and little else. This is especially sad, given that the game had so much potential to be more. Unfortunately, EA Games has long had the attitude of "who cares if it is good? It has Brand X on it, it will sell!". They killed the Command & Conquer franchise with this attitude, and it looks as if they intend to milk every last drop from The Lord Of The Rings without changing it one little bit. To its credit, the Final Fantasy-style combat structure does manage to engage the player for the first couple of realms, but it all goes downhill in a hurry after that. This is not surprising when one considers that the game was made by EA, who have long shown no interest in what happens to the player's sense of enjoyment once they have money. It is difficult to believe that this is the same company that produced such innovations as California Games.
The Third Age's plot, such as it is, revolves around a party of adventurers who follow something of a similar path to the Fellowship depicted in the film trilogy. Therein lies the first mistake of the game. By following the films too closely, it inherits all the mistakes. Gone are all the truly interesting aspects of Tolkien's universe, only to be replaced by long, tedious strolls through very linear mazes, or equally tedious battle events, which pop up so frequently during the aforementioned walks that it is a wonder epileptics haven't shown violent reactions. More interesting to note is the promise of authentic footage from the films to pick up as a bonus during the game. It would have been nice if this had meant footage that viewers of the films in any form have not seen at least three times already. Sadly, it does not. Not only is footage from the film all they show, so little is used that one can expect to see each segment, in different edits, at least a dozen times.
But the real evidence that EA Games did not do their homework lies in the battle sequences. The biggest problem with them, in a nutshell, is balance. Early on in the game, it is possible to win the most difficult combats if one keeps their head on right and focuses on strategy. It is not until we get to Rohan, however, that the balance problem really comes out to attack. I would be willing to bet generously that if one were to take a couple of hundred hours worth of footage of people playing this game, then edit everything out bar the missed strikes, missed strikes from the player characters would outnumber those of the CPU characters by a factor of at least ten to one. I realise it is hard to program a margin of human error into an artificial intelligence, but this goes way beyond unbalanced. This is what those of us who remember the good old days when games had only gameplay to rely upon call rigged. I am going to keep saying it until either I die or they listen, but between making a short game and making one that feels rigged after a mere few hours' play, making the short game is the smarter choice.
Unfortunately, this rigged feel just keeps building and building until it reaches truly ludicrous heights. It is possible to even reach situations where all of your characters are low enough on health that a singular blow may kill them, but the enemy has stolen enough health from your characters that it is as if they never received a scratch. Couple this with the aforementioned miss/dodge ratio, and you can see that this game has big problems. Indeed, it is only because I kept my temper and purchased an Action Replay program in order to swing the balance back to something that approximates fairness that I have not thrown this disc at a nearby road. During the Minas Tirith sequences, it is utterly impossible to win combats without doing this. The use of blows that take the balance of turn sequencing away doesn't help, either.
All of this would be forgivable if the characters were likable enough to make the player care about their personal quests. They accomplish this to some extent. While the lead hero gets boring, even childish after a while, the saving grace with the characters is Hadhod, the Dwarf. Perhaps EA were trying to atone for the appalling racist Dwarf caricature of the film trilogy by proxy. Either way, if they had focused on this character during the game rather than the beaten-to-death Men or Elves, this might have made the story vaguely compelling. As it is, the rest of the cast have about as much depth as an episode of Neighbours, and often a delivery to match. I realise that voice actors for video games almost always record their voiceovers before they get to see any game footage, but even if they have to deliver the most stilted of dialogue, they could at least try to sound like warriors in combat rather than a bunch of excited schoolchildren.
After playing through the game in about 45 hours, I have to say that I am incredibly reluctant to approach it again. It just doesn't work, and that's simply appalling. Tolkien adaptations in the digital realm have not progressed one inch since the days when The Hobbit was first rendered as a text-based adventure for the Vic-20. Licensors such as EA Games should hang their heads in shame for that.
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