- Publisher: THQ
- Release Date: Jun 24, 2008
- Also On: PC, PlayStation 3, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5
Buy Now
- Critic score
- Publication
- By date
-
With tons of visual issues, a horrible camera and gameplay that isn't particularly striking or innovative, Wall-E does a disservice to the little robot that falls in love.
-
Whilst WALL-E might be the most adorable robot you’ll ever see, the game certainly isn’t. The game feels rushed and is a very poor use of the license.
-
Wall-E is your typical movie turned game, it feels rushed, the graphics are substandard and it isn't fun to play.
-
It’s just a bit of, well, a waste. It begs for something more, some more substance to the charm that’s already here in spades—more under-the-hood play for those precocious kiddies, more behind-the-scenes goodies for those older kiddies-at-heart who, let’s face it, probably bought WALL-E for their own kids to play.
-
A pile of uninspired, by-the-numbers gameplay and missed opportunities.
-
Avoid at all costs.
-
Wall-E is yet another movie tie-in game that doesn’t meet the quality of the Pixar film.
-
X-ONE Magazine UKSmall kids might like it, but will need supervision to solve some of hte later puzzles. Adults beware. [Issue#36, p.96]
-
Half-arsed dross.
-
Though it sharply replicates the film's look and sounds, the Wall-E game has none of the movie's romantic spirit as it sends the lead robot and his gal pal Eve on a set of uninspired missions pulled out of the videogame cliches handbook.
-
Somehow someone somewhere managed to design and create a game that is almost completely devoid of fun and enjoyment.
-
If throwing cubes of trash at buttons is up your alley, then we've got just the thing: Heavy Iron's game-itization of Pixar's WALL-E is an offal-chucking aficionado's dream come true. What it isn't, though, is much fun at all.
User score distribution:
-
Positive: 5 out of 14
-
Mixed: 6 out of 14
-
Negative: 3 out of 14
-
Jun 19, 2020
-
Jan 1, 2019
-
Aug 3, 2017