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From Comic Books to Video Games - The 3 best and worst

28/5/2016

6 Comments

 
Guest Blog by Kevin K @Agent_Prince
Comic Books to Video Games
From Comic Books to Video Games - A good idea or a bad move?
Over the years comic book licences have brought a….mixture of fortunes to the world of video games. Not just in the world of video games but throughout the eclectic geeky culture of Comic Cons, Comic Book movies, Comic Book inspired clothing and more. Back when I was a kid it was not cool to be caught reading a comic and it was certainly not cool to walk around with Marvel characters plastered across your T-shirt and socks. No! In fact it was almost Taboo. How times have changed though right?! Nowadays you cannot walk down the stress without seeing a cluster of people with something Comic Book related. A pin badge of Wolverine pinned to the bag of a college student, a T-shirt, hearing a ringtone from a DC Cartoon - Comic Book culture has risen to become an integral part of geek and more mainstream culture. Why is this? We could argue that Hollywood's interpretations of various Comic Book franchises has a lot to do with it but we are not here to talk about that. We are here to talk about some of the best and worst Comic Book licensed Video Games from over the years. Here I try to offer 3 of the best and worst for you to experience and avoid at your leisure.

3 of the Best

Spider-Man & the X-Men: Arcade’s Revenge (SNES)
Everything an old school comic book based video game needs:-
·        Team-Ups!
·        Amazing characters!
·        Cool theme music!
·        Faithful comic book menace!
·        Unfathomably difficult!
·        No continues!
 
Maybe not the last two so much, but Spider-Man & the X-Men is very challenging indeed. Once lives are all used up, that’s it; there are no saves or passwords. Sounds ominous, but this is a great SNES classic, and a must for any comic fan.

The theme song sounds like a 70’s US cop show theme, with a very catchy accompanying soundtrack. Spider-Man & the X-Men is essentially a standard left to right plat-former. It does offer slight variation with each of the character-designated stages; Spider-Man, Cyclops, Wolverine, Gambit and Storm. Although one hell of a tough game, it’s highly playable, faithful to the character’s appearances of the time, and a very rewarding achievement should you actually complete it. I've managed it just once.

Marvel Super Heroes (Arcade)
Ever since Capcom made the genius of move snapping up the Marvel license, the characters were pitted against one another in Capcom’s genre of choice – beat-em ups. There have been no less than eight different iterations, the first in X-Men: Children of the Atom, to the latest, Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3. For me, It was the second of such titles – Marvel Super Heroes – that captured the comic book essence most of all. It also happens to be an amazing one on one beat em up.

There are ten characters available, covering different angles of the Marvel Universe. Fan favourites Wolverine and Psylocke were retained, as well as the chance to be the final boss Magneto, all from Children of the Atom. Add Captain America, Iron Man, Spider-Man, Juggernaut and The Hulk into the mix, and there is a truly great selection of Marvel characters on offer here. With great boss characters in Doctor Doom and Thanos to back up the fantastic roster, it’s a fan boy/girl’s dream.

What separates Marvel Super Heroes from the crowd is the gems system. Loosely based on the Thanos-related Infinity Gems storyline, five of the six gems can be obtained during combat. Each gem (Power, Time, Space, Reality, and Soul) holds different results. For example, if Juggernaut uses the Space gem, his armour turns silver, and will not flinch/fall after being attacked, for a short time. These might sound off-putting or skill-quashing, but they occur infrequently, and through special conditions, such as first attack, etc. Although the Marvel vs. Capcom series has since massively expanded the series, Marvel Super Heroes is a true gem (pun intended).

Batman Arkham Asylum (Xbox 360/PS3/PC)
The arrival of Batman Arkham Asylum exorcised a couple of superhero/video game demons:
·        Firstly, it had been years since a decent comic book related video game had finally been developed.
·        The second? It was so damn good it still stands up with some of the best third-person action/adventure games of this current generation, something unheard of for a comic book license.
 
Batman Arkham Asylum is a superb video game. It is a perfect homage to the comic to which it is based (Arkham Asylum), and to the excellent 90’s animated series, with its quality voice acting. A clever and intuitive fighting system allows you to take on swarms of enemies at once, to spectacular effect. Batman’s vast array of gadgets is gathered as the adventure progresses, such as the grappling hook, Batarang’s, and so on. Detective mode may sound a bit naff, but is a necessity for success; following vapour trails, footprints and clues that would be otherwise unseen. You really feel like you are Batman.
Spiderman & The X-Men Revenge characters
Spiderman & The X-Men Revenge on the SNES
3 of the worst:

Straight off the bat, I am compelled to mention Superman 64. It is widely regarded as not only the worst superhero game, but the worst game for the Nintendo 64. Just to confirm, it is not one of my picks, as I have never played it.

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (NES)
When this, the first TMNT video game for the Nintendo Entertainment System was released, many flocked to it, particularly kids. I was one of them; I was not going to pass up the chance to be one of my new-found cartoon heroes. Having sampled the fun but brief arcade scrolling beat em up, hopes were high.
Oh dear. A few minutes in, it becomes clear that despite the license, this is a travesty of a video game. Adopting a more platform approach, the gameplay is hideous, and then some. Jumping is so unnecessarily high that small gaps are just near impossible to make, attacks are sluggish and take forever to complete. The visuals barely have more colours than a ZX Spectrum, with lots of flicker and slowdown. The swimming sections will have you wishing your ‘heroes’ were once again pet turtles, just to navigate them successfully. I admit I loved it as a kid, being only eight at the time, and was one of the first NES games I ever played. Unfortunately, TMNT is not one even for the nostalgic, as the video below explains with more subtlety.

Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 (Xbox 360/PS3)
I’ve always been a fan of scrolling beat em ups, which Marvel: Ultimate Alliance 2 (Xbox 360/PS3) is a variation of. I was excited for this one. But what a comedown it was. The action itself is a nonstop, repetitive, button bashing hell. You lose as much health as you gain, and most of the time you are not aware of it even happening as you’re too busy mashing buttons!

With tedious levels, repetitive bosses and terrible voice acting, it’s difficult to want to be one of your favourite Marvel heroes in this one. Indeed, that’s Ultimate Alliance 2’s only saving graces; the vast amount of playable characters on offer, and the plot, borrowed from the successful ‘Civil War’ storyline. But considering the arduous task Ultimate Alliance 2 is to play, I wouldn’t bother.

X-Men: Children of the Atom (PS1)
Ok, so it’s not one of the worst games, but it is an awful conversion of an arcade classic.
 
The pros:
·        A home conversion of a classic. We all welcome that.
·        Its X-Men, therefore cool in my book.
·        That’s about it.
The cons:
·        The frame rate is shocking. 30 FPS in fact.
·        Slow down and intermittent mid game flickering
·        Much slower than even the Saturn version, never mind the arcade
·        Ending has been removed (!)
·        Capcom didn't develop this version.
 
PS1 versions of Capcom fighters were generally slower but never this bad. Children of the Atom also arrived 4 years too late to the home market, leaving it a very redundant release.
So these are my picks, but how do yours differ? Any stinkers you feel need reporting, or classics that need addressing? Drop a comment below and tell me your best and worst.

​Guest Blogger: Kevin K @Agent_Prince
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6 Comments
Matt L link
28/5/2016 20:12:34

Nice write up, really enjoyed that. X-Men COTA is my favourite fighting game ever, so despite it being vastly inferior on PS1, to me it's still fantastic... just flawed.

A few of my fave comic book games;

Spiderman - Mega Drive
Batman Returns - SNES
Cadillacs & Dinosaurs - Arcade

Reply
John Games TM
3/6/2016 16:25:02

Love Batman on the Genesis.

Reply
Sega Games link
31/5/2016 01:19:13

Awesome article written by someone knowledgeable on the topic. TMNT had such potential...

I'd be interested in guest blogging for you guys sometime, drop me an email if you're interested!

Reply
Juicy Game Reviews
2/6/2016 10:26:19

Thanks. If you could drop me an email we can talk a little more. It's Juicygamereviews@gmail.com

As I'm a one woman team I'm always looking for new guest bloggers to show their potential.

Thanks
Gemma

Reply
Ken Ashton
31/5/2016 21:53:48

Entertaining and informative article. Only ever played Arkham Asylum out of these so gives me some more titles to consider. Think Batman seems to fair rather well as far as video game releases goes compared to most other comic characters.

Reply
Juicy Game Reviews
3/6/2016 16:24:16

The Batman series seems to have evolved really well. Of late especially:)

Reply



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