Not fancying the
prospect of spending the rest
of his life in an zoo, CJ The
Elephant has bailed out of the
aeroplane which was taking
him to England, using a
nearby umbrella as a
parachute. Worse still, he's
landed in France, with miles
(or at least levels) to go in
order to get back to his loving
family in deepest Africa.
A slightly unfeasible plot,
yes (elephants opening
umbrellas?), but still a pretty
decent multiway scrolling
platformy game - a bit like a
scrolling
Rick Dangerous dare
I say (not that that's too much
of a bad thing of course).
Firstly, as in
Ricky D,
the majority of the
baddies walk along short
platforms in set patterns,
and so have to be shot
with a peanut (lethal
apparently) or bombed with
a bomb (if you've collected
some). None of this is too
tricky, although it does take
some time to work where to
stand so it's the baddy that's
killed, and not you. Also rather
Rick Dangerously there are
spikes and stuff everywhere
(usually directly below you
when you leap from a platform
and impale yourself on one) so
the trick in order to progress is
to sort of memorise the layout
of each level.
At this point in the review, I
think it might be appropriate to
mention the graphics, the
sound, and how addictive and
playable
CJ's Elephant Antics
is (if at all).
Well, the
graphics are
quite colourful
and well drawn
(though you do
merge in with
the
background),
but the scrolling
is extremely
jerky. Tsk. And
the sound is
okayish too. As
for
addictiveness,
well, it comes
out trumps
(or should
that be
trunks?),
mainly
because it's
easy to
progress
(although some
parts are seemingly impossible
to pass without losing a life).
There's a number (I'm not
quite sure how many) of
different levels, each one set in
a different country with varied
backgrounds, baddies and
end-of-level nasties which
adds variety and stems the
flow of boredom (although the
initial screens admittedly do
get repetitive after a while).
One extra bonus is the
simultaneous 2-player option
where the players take a CJ
each and work together, which
I imagine would up the fun
factor considerably (even if it is
rather pointless as far as the
gameplay goes). A severe lack
of friends however means that
I can't supply you with any
conclusive evidence on that
one.
(It's a sad story. Ed)
Okay, so he's hardly going
to become as famous as Nellie
or Undercover, but if we
forgive it its jerky scrolling and
severe lack of originality, I'd
say that
CJ The Elephant
deserves to become a bit of a
star.
Antics is simple, cute,
clean and cliched fun, and
certainly worth its bob or two.
| Ratings given by other magazines |
|
|
| Info supplied by the SPOT*ON database |