RoadKill
GameCube- Publisher: Midway
- Release Date: Oct 30, 2003
- Also On: PC, PC, PlayStation 2
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A great alternative to GTA and TMB on the GameCube. While certainly not as stellar as these two hallmark titles, well just have to stop complaining that there are no extremely violent games on the GameCube.
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This game earns all of its M-rating. It's a capital M. There is more gore, rough language, and general disrespect for humanity in this game than in most prisons. If you go in with your eyes open or (God help us) even enjoy some of these things, then it can be bloody good fun.
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If you think the idea of a game about driving around in a machine-gun-toting car while completely ignoring traffic laws and blowing away anything in your path sounds like fun, then you'll get it out of RoadKill.
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The overly simplistic gameplay, re-hashed visuals, unbalanced level design, and generic storyline all factor in to make this hybrid of yesteryears best selling, finest games, a low rent middle class knock off. Nevertheless, the sheer visceral excitement of blowing stuff up and witnessing ultra-violent, unapologetically brutal cut-scenes and road rage is hard to deny.
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Between its immature "Mature-rated" content (naughty language is prevalent) and rough gameplay, RoadKill narrowly misses excellence.
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Gamers who liked the idea of, say, "Twisted Metal Black," but found the execution too quick and snappy to be satisfying, should check out Road Kill, a decidedly more kinetic follower.
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If you live with your mother, smoke pot, watch wrestling, cant vote, and love The Cramps or have a big brother who does, you will likely have a blast with this game. Not only can you get your violence fix by yourself on a Wednesday night, but you and your friends can have fun wrecking each other in the 4-player split-screen.
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Electronic Gaming MonthlyAs a car-combat game, it's passable but not exceptional. As a postacopalyptic "GTA" clone, it falls well short of the mark in terms of story, mission diversity, and replay value. [Nov 2003, p.171]
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This game does nothing new except offer a ton of foul language to get you in trouble with the 'rents. Next, please.
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Take one part "Grand Theft Auto" and one part car combat game "Twisted Metal Black." Mix, ingest, and vomit. Stare wistfully into bowl. What could have been a great gamecar carnage with heavy artillery against gangs in cities devastated by a mysterious plagueis only mediocre.
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I can see some 15 year old playing the game hidden away in their parents basement enjoying it for its lewdness, but for the rest of us youd never want to play this game at all. Not quite as bad as "BMX XXX," but around the same level.
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Nintendo PowerA mediocre mess of a vehicular battle game that contains an excessive amount of violence and strong language. [Feb 2004, p.150]
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