Prey 

After ten years and countless redesigns, this spiritual shooter finally strolls into town. What a let down...

Prey’s been a long time in coming. In fact when its release was first slated, Jumanji was wowing kids everywhere and Foo Fighters released their debut album. Oh how we remember 1995.

During its lengthy gestation period, Prey’s been sliced and diced more times than cosmetic surgery poster girl Jordan.

At last it arrives, on both the PC and the Xbox 360 – the version we’re reviewing – and sets out its stall as a traditional first person shooter with a few tricks up its sleeve.

But can this elder statesman beat off from the likes of Half Life 2?

They say:

EDGE: “As much an anthology of high sheen sci-fi concept as it is of FPS craft, Prey would just as happily bear a Huge Award on its mantlepiece as an Edge one.”

EuroGamer: “Prey struggles to break free of its late '90s genesis, and essentially what we're left with is a game whose good intentions simply don't translate into wide eyed entertainment.”

GameSpot: “Fans of the genre have probably played games better than Prey in the past, but the action and the environments you move through are interesting enough to make playing through the game worthwhile.”

We say:

The ‘spiritual side’ of Prey has played a major part in the many, many previews that have appeared in various magazines. What a pity this avenue wasn’t fully explored.

As a Cherokee Indian who doesn’t particularly care for his heritage, your character Tommy wants out of reservation faster than you can say Hi Ho Silver. But the moment he plucks up the courage to whisk girlfriend Jen off to new pastures, the pair of them, along with Tommy’s grandfather, are sucked up into some kind of alien spacecraft.

And that’s where the spiritual side ends. After all the thoughtful preamble, Prey transpires to be a slightly better than average FPS with the odd interesting idea grafted on.

You can zip between portals and tinker about with the gravity, but neither innovation packs the kind of punch you’d expect. The simplistic level design never has you stuck or confused about what to do, or where to go next.

You’d think they’d hide a few of the portals to get your grey matter working. But no. See a portal in the distance, get to it… and that’s it. Not very satisfying. And so we’re left with yet another humdrum game. It could have been so much more, but a lack of care on the level design leaves it a mere shell of what it could have been.

Don’t get us wrong, there are some great visuals and it’s an OK experience while it lasts. Considering how long we’ve been waiting though, and how much was promised, you can help but feel a little disappointed.

Like this? Try these:

Half Life 2 – PC, Xbox
Halo 2 – Xbox
Call of Duty 2 – PC, Xbox 360

FORMAT REVIEWED
Xbox 360

OTHER FORMATS
PC

POSTED...
Mon 17 Jul 2006 at 6:31pm

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