They are levels in The Simpsons Game that hit stores on Tuesday amid praise from critics for its faithful recreation of the hit TV show\'s look, feel and humour.
\"That was one of the big design challenges on this game, to make
each of the levels feel like episodes. We wanted to make the game feel
like a fully playable season of the show,\" said Hans Tencate, lead
producer on the game at Electronic Arts Inc.
Several writers from the TV show injected the game with the irreverent wit The Simpsons is known for, coming up with some 8000 lines of dialogue - enough for a full season.
\"Few games embrace their license\'s soul so well - The Simpsons
Game nails the show\'s trademark humor, in-jokes, and social satire,
plus it features impressive cartoony graphics and the real-deal voice
actors. This is total fan service, meaning Simpsons fans and apologists
will be pleased,\" gaming news site 1up.com said in its review.
The new game is the latest addition to the already large
catalogue of more than 20 \"Simpsons\" titles, which range from 1991\'s
arcade machine to 2003\'s The Simpsons: Hit & Run.
But this appears to adhere most faithfully to the show.
Developers came up with a way that let them create Homer, Bart
and other characters in 3D yet retain a look that is remarkably like
the cartoony visual style of the show.
\"It\'s actually much harder to do than you would think partly
because The Simpsons is hand-drawn. We came up with proprietary
technology ... that gives the game a little more of what the TV show
would look like,\" Tencate said.
The game hopes to build on two other milestones this year: the
400th episode of the TV show and the long-awaited movie adaptation that
has pulled in more than $500 million at the box office worldwide.
In the game, the Simpsons discover they are living inside a
video game and have powers matching their personalities. Bart, for
example, can turn into the superhero \"Bartman\" while Lisa can activate
the \"Hand of Buddha\" to move large objects.
Just as the show used a pop culture medium to skewer pop
culture, the game is peppered with parodies of an industry still
struggling to shed geeky stereotypes and win mainstream acceptance.
\"There are not many video games to my recollection that do
full-blown multilayered parodies of the video game industry. We make
fun of everything from Pong to Tomb Raider,\" Tencate said.
While the humour has won praise from critics, some reviewers
said they were disappointed with some of the actual gameplay, the lack
of online features and for limiting cooperative play to two people.
The game had an average rating of 69 on Metacritic.com, which
creates a weighted average of reviews from gaming websites and
publications.