Now that I work 17-18 hours a day on the
Smartphone & Pocket PC magazine Best Software Awards 2006 evaluation, comparison and, what is even more important, a whole slew of new product roundups (I’m absolutely sure you all will be very delighted to read them! Stay tuned :) ), I routinely check all the titles I evaluate whether they have received an update in the meantime.
Upon one of my tests (tested whether one of the best shooter games,
Enslave, has received a new version), I’ve run into a not-yet-reviewed, promising game,
TURBO REACTION 2: Free Emotion from the same developer,
MoreGames Entertainment.
Game genre
There are quite few games of this type on the Pocket PC; most importantly,
TapzMania: Bug Killer by
RU0 games, reviewed in the
Definitive Multiplayer PPC Game Roundup and sold for $11.95 (or, in the four-pack bundle reviewed
here, for $25, bundled with three, well, not very good but still passable other games).
There isn’t much to be said on the game itself: you have to hit the sprites as accurately and quickly as possible. If you like really siple, but entertaining games, you may want to give it a try.
Availability
The game is available here, has a demo version (unfortunately, with only 5 levels enabled) and costs
$9.95.
Compatibility
It has no problems running on my PPC2k2 (tested on my iPAQ 3660), WM2003 (tested on my iPAQ 2210) and WM2003SE (including VGA; tested on the PL720) devices. It, however,
isn’t compatible with WM5 at all – tested on my all three WM5 devices.
In-game music
Many of you know I was on the PC scene as a coder and diskmag editor some 14-17 years ago (yes, in the infancy of the PC as a demo/home computer). Therefore, the in-game/in-menu music struck me as “hey, I do know these!”. A quick glance at
blit.exe, from position 0x6b848 revealed I was right: the 16-channel module has been composed by
Big Bear / FT, his well-known module ‘
Jetstream’, which was one of the contenders at the party
PAiN 9/97. It’s also available
on his homepage (
direct download link here).
The menu music is “
Towards Immortality”, has been composed by Finnish
Groo / The Black Robes,
was second in the music section of great Finnish demoparty Assembly back in 1992 and is available
here for download.
(Yeah, scener background and having attended a LOT of demo parties can be pretty advantageous some time, even at writing reviews of Pocket PC games ;) ).
Pros- Great, stereo, tracked music. I’d like to see more and more Pocket PC games using stereo (!), tracked music, preferably composed by sceners.
- Simple, entertaining
Cons- Price: for $10, you can get considerably better generic action titles like those of PDAMill or iDreams (SkyForce Reloaded or Flux Challenge, anyone?). As far as strictly this genre is concerned, TapzMania: Bug Killer is definitely a better buy for only $2 more.
- Absolutely no WM5 support
- QVGA resolution (the homepage states “VGA compatible” – this, in this case too, only means compatibility, NOT using high resolution)
- Any kind of notification bubbles crash the game
Compared to...
When compared to the, in my opinion, best game of this genre,
TapzMania , I don't think
TURBO REACTION 2 has anything to write home about.
TapzMania has probably the best in-game (tracked) music I've ever heard in a Pocket PC action game and is far more entertaining, particularly in multiplayer mode. Also, TapzMania is WM5-compliant, unlike
TURBO REACTION 2.
Verdict
This title is, unfortunately, in no way as groundbreaking and revolutionary as Enslave by the same developer. You may, however, want to give it a try, especially if you can listen to the in-game scener music and (already) find
TapzMania boring – assuming you have a pre-WM5 device. If you have a WM5 device, forget it.
Other than that, if you haven't tested as yet, give a try to
TapzMania first. I'm pretty sure you'll like it a lot, particularly its music. Also, you may want to look at action - color matcher games if you still need the action element ("shoot as quickly and precisely as possible"); for example,
Astraware Zuma or
DragonBall, both reviewed in the
Roundup of Zuma / Luxor clones on the Pocket PC.
Other, related articles
PocketMatrix's review of part I
UPDATE: In the meantime, I’ve also scrutinized the (great) music used in
Enslave. It also uses scener music (probably this is why there is no “music credits” in the game, only “sound” - that is, in-game sounds like explosions). For example,
credits_outro.mus is
Slice’s
astronomic track.1 available for download here.