ReBoot (video game)
ReBoot | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Electronic Arts |
Publisher(s) |
Electronic Arts Mainframe Entertainment |
Composer(s) | Robert Buckley |
Platform(s) | PlayStation |
Release date(s) | |
Genre(s) | Action |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
ReBoot is a 1998 video game developed by Electronic Arts (EA) and published by EA and Mainframe Entertainment for the PlayStation video game console. It is based on the television show of the same name.
Plot
Megabyte has found a way to use the power of energy tears to reach the core of the principle office thanks to Hexadecimal's mirrors and is determined to take over Mainframe. Bob, the game's lead character, must mend tears and destroy deadly adversaries in the six sectors of Mainframe: Baudway, Cit E (also known as Wall Street), Beverly Hills, Kits, Floating Point Park and G-Prime along with the island of Lost Angles.
Gameplay
The player controls Bob, who starts with an ordinary pistol. Weapons that are more powerful can be obtained as the player progresses through the game. Bob can use a variety of keytools to either mend a tear or defeat an enemy. Keytool abilities include stealing health from enemies to replenish the player's; scrambling the wires of Megabyte's basic weapon, the turret, to turn it against enemies; and freezing enemies for a limited period of time. Throughout each level is an item that can be used to power up the player's weapon, replenish health or give the player temporary invincibility. Some items are hidden, while others appear after defeating an enemy.
Voice cast
- Michael Benyaer: Bob
- Tony Jay: Megabyte
- Shirley Millner: Hexadecimal
- Kathleen Barr: Dot Matrix
- Matthew Sinclair: Enzo Matrix
- Michael Donovan: Mike the TV / Phong
- Scott McNeil: Hack
- Garry Chalk: Slash
- David Horner: Clash
Reception
ReBoot has a score of 69 percent on GameRankings, based on six reviews.[1]
GameSpot's Josh Smith, who rated the game 4.1 out of 10, criticized the game's poor camera views and wrote, "As is no surprise to anyone following the history of video game licenses, the game offers mediocre gameplay whose few innovations are overshadowed by the half-baked quality of the game's control and graphics."[2]
IGN rated the game 7 out of 10 and wrote, "Although this game doesn't really break any technological or graphical boundaries, Reboot is a fun game." IGN praised the game for being "fun" and for its skateboard gameplay elements, while also noting that its environments "look almost identical" to the television series. However, IGN criticized the game's digital control, writing that it plays better with an analog controller.[3]
References
- ↑ "ReBoot". GameRankings. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
- ↑ Smith, Josh (1998-04-08). "ReBoot Review". GameSpot. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
- ↑ "ReBoot". IGN. 1998-03-19. Retrieved 2016-09-25.
External links
- ReBoot (VG) at the Internet Movie Database
- ReBoot at MobyGames