![]() Steam rises from the sides of the tracks, floodlights sweep the straights and if you aren't speechless after spiraling through Arc Prime's near vertical plunge out of the sky towards a Monaco-esque coastline panorama, then perhaps gaming just isn't for you. The gameplay is pitch perfect, the game is bursting with content and visually, where Pure was arguably the first word on the PSP's capabilities, Pulse could well be the last (not that God of War: Chains of Olympus won't have something to say about that). It proved beyond doubt that the PSP was packing some serious heat under the hood, and that Sony still knew how to make games that left gamers breathless and critics humbled.Īnd so how does a successor step out from such an imposing shadow how can WipEout Pure be improved upon? In WipEout Pulse's case the answer is, it seems, in every possible way. ![]() ![]() The game was a unequivocal success story for the PSP and a promise for the console's future. It's difficult to approach a review for WipEout Pulse without first eulogizing about WipEout Pure.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |