Rent Disney/Pixar Brave: The Video Game for Wii
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Disney/Pixar Brave: The Video Game

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Used: $12.99

Also on:Xbox 360, PS3, DS
GF Rating
7.0

126 ratings

Critic & User Reviews

GF Rating
4

Weak

Oh my...

posted by AubittheHobbit (GRANTS PASS, OR) Mar 18, 2013

Member since Jun 2012

I love Brave. As soon as it came out my fiancee grabbed it up on Special Edition Blue Ray and the soundtrack too. I know my general rule of thumb for video games based from movie, stay away. But based on the excitement of it I tossed it to the Q hoping for the best.
Sigh.
I understand they can not have the same graphics as the movie, but honestly the graphics felt late N64, Early Gamecube. But the storyline was kind of rushed. Easy to follow and beautiful control handling, but both my fiancee and I felt it butchered the story.
For such a beautifully stunning movie this game is like the ugly redheaded stepchild that needs to stay in the broom cupboard.

For little kids go ahead, but if you have any respect for graphics in your games and some challenge keep this off the Q!

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GF Rating
5

Fair

Just Okay

posted by slw (KILLEEN, TX) Jul 26, 2012

Member since Jul 2012

5 out of 6 gamers (83%) found this review helpful

I got this game for my 9 year old she enjoyed playing it for a while but lost interest shortly after.

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GF Rating
5

Fair

Has courage, but little imagination

posted by JMichaud (BETHESDA, MD) Jun 22, 2012

Top Reviewer

Member since Jan 2008

10 out of 11 gamers (91%) found this review helpful

When a lass named Merida sets forth a curse on her family – turning her mother into a bear – she has to go forth and defeat all sorts of monsters to set things right.
Through seven levels, your task is to go from point A to point B, and defeat every creature you come across using your bow or sword.
Along the way, you gather up charms that will vary your attack. One charm is fire based, one charm in air based, one is stone (or earth) based, and the last is water.
Each creature you go up against is vulnerable to one of the four types, and the trick here is to ready that charm, and then beat up the monster.
You can also gather up hidden items that boost your attack power, your health, and your mother’s attack power and health. You also gather up gold to boost your charms’ abilities and power, get more health from potions and obtain other minor abilities.
But this game got repetitive really fast. Most of the time I spend wandering through the levels and beating up everything that I come across with the bow (the swing mechanism used for the sword is very clunky and unreliable).
And there’s really no difference between the charms other than aesthetics; there are only a few attacks available – the swing, the ground pound, the single shot, or the power shot. I was hoping for different types of attack for different charms, but that didn’t happen.
The game tries to break up the monotony with segments where you can be the mother bear and rip apart armies of monsters, or use the triplets to solve very simple puzzles. But they just don’t carry much weight to them.
If it weren’t for a very tough final boss, this game would be over in three to four hours – far too short for a game costing $50. I feel this game deserves closer to a $30 price tag.
Brave, the video game is fun for those of us looking for a simple beat them up game, but it could’ve been so much more than that. SKIP IT.

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