Lately, I’ve had absolutely no time to test new games because I’ve spent all my time in real-world projects (yeah, I need to do some work to make both ends meet and to be able to purchase all the new gadgets), the
Windows Mobile Web Browsing Bible and, of course, the
Smartphone & Pocket PC magazine’s Annual Best Software Awards I’ve become the Nominations Manager of. So, let me quickly review two of the titles; first,
A REAL Prince of Persia-clone!
You must have heard of
Prince of Persia, which, back in 1990 (in addition to
Indianapolis 500 and
Legend Entertainment’s
Spellcasting 101), was one of my favorite games on the IBM PC.
So far, there was no real Prince clone of the game on Windows Mobile. Up until now, that is; now, well-known (see the review of their
Billiard Master 2 and
Bowling Master review & comparison in the
Windows Mobile Multiplayer Bible) Russian Windows Mobile & Palm OS games developer Mobirate has just started reimplementing the game on Windows Mobile.
The demo can be downloaded
HERE and is WM2003+ compatible.
The project is really at the alpha stage and a lot of stuff doesn’t work.
The Options screen is completely messed up (the labels are not visible at all and you can only guess what a particular checkbox does) on both VGA and QVGA devices, there’s no Button 1 (I’ve tested this on all my three Pocket PC’s (Dell Axim x51v A12, HP iPAQ 2210, HTC Wizard with AKU3.3 ROM) I’ve deployed the game on). The on-screen controls seem to be non-existent (albeit, after switching some “Off” checkboxes to “On” in Options, the game started to use them – but not the D-pad any more). Furthermore, there are absolutely no sound effects / music. Finally, the game may be pretty slow on some devices: it was barely playable (17-18 fps) on my iPAQ 2210. The HTC Wizard running at 240 MHz fared better (24 fps); finally, the x51v was the best (about 26 fps).
While the lack of for example button support may render the game completely useless (for example, you won’t be able to even do basic stuff like
drinking potions), you may still want to give it a try, particularly because
the developer is giving away free copies of the final version to the best, most productive betatesters (see the last sentence in
readme.txt).
I really hope a (more) playable version follows very soon.
Note that
the developer’s homepage doesn’t contain any real information on the game. For example, the
image’s link takes you to their game compilation Brain Master. I’ve tried to supply different URL’s (by increasing the document ID referenced by the URL) to find out whether there is a page dedicated to the game; there (still) isn’t. That is, you won’t get any additional info on the game.
(News source: have run into the news upon routinely checking for a new, Microsoft Bluetooth stack-compliant version of
Billiard Master 2 and
Bowling Master on the developer’s homepage).