Zack & Wiki: Quest for Barbaros' Treasure |
| By Chris Clement / Tuesday, 06 November 2007 | |||||
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Although many games have incorporated adventure elements, pure adventure gaming seems to have gone the way of the proverbial Dodo bird in favor of other video game mainstays like action and platforming. This is where Zack & Wiki: Quest for Barbaros' Treasure dares to be different. It is an adventure game first and foremost, one that ignores the conventional demands for perfect timing and frantic button-mashing to focus instead on the need to explore anything and everything. ![]() Say hello to Zack and Wiki, the strangest pirates you'll ever meet. The two characters doing all of this adventure are none other than Capcom's newest stars, Zack and Wiki. Zack is a rookie want-to-be pirate with a taste for treasure and chocolate bars. His faithful companion is a golden flying monkey with a helicopter tail named Wiki. Together, these plunderers embark on a journey for fortune only to discover a treasure chest with the cursed golden skull of the legendary pirate Barbaros. In exchange for assembling his scattered gold-encrusted remains and lifting the curse, Barbaros promises Zack and Wiki the way to Treasure Island along with his famous ship. To do this, Zack and Wiki must travel to a variety of venues across the map and brave the multitude of traps, savages, and creatures that stand in their way. ![]() First level: saw down a tree before you get squashed by your plane. Interacting with objects changes the camera view to first-person so that there's no confusion as to where to point. A smiling mannequin in the top right corner of the screen will then demonstrate how an item is to be used with the Wii Remote (assuming Zack is holding it). Although the figure looks a bit out of place against all of the detailed scenery, it does a nice job of showing gamers how to perform the necessary motion. ![]() What other game features a bunny as an airplane pilot? The scenery of the stages is colorful and beautiful. The initial environment is a jungle setting with lush coconut trees, water slides, ruin structures and hungry savages (must be all of their dancing). The cartoon-like look of the game works so well that even the most realistic 3D-obsessed gamer will probably find the style appealing. The frame-rate ran smoothly with only an occasional hiccup in progressive scan and widescreen. While the sound effects of the game are crisp and appropriate to the scenes, the absence of voice acting in favor of text and weird Zelda-inspired squawks can be annoying. |
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