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IGN Review of Spyro Orange: The Cortex Conspiracy
Features
- Play as Spyro the Dragon
- Several dozen mini-game challenges
- More than a hundred trading cards to collect
- Cartridge save (three slots)
- Link cable support for up to four players (single and multiple cartridge)
- Connectivity with Crash Bandicoot Purple
And it's not just the side-scrolling design that's the huge change for Spyro. The focus of the gameplay has now changed to offer players a wide variety of different challenges and mini-game assortment. Since Spyro's a winged dragon, much of these challenges are of the old-school vertical and horizontal shooter design where players blast through a forced-scrolling perspective. Others are suitably non-dragonish, including one where Spyro controls a magnetic walker that can stride both normally and upside-down. Officially, Vivendi estimates more than 25 different mini-games in Spyro Orange, but many of them are recycled versions of the same game in a different package. Even though they do repeat (and a few are "borrowed" from Crash Purple), most of these games are fun and challenging that get tougher as players get deeper into the adventure.
But the variety of the gameplay gets overshadowed by the weaker element of actually getting to these mini-challenges. The designers of Spyro Orange have created a set of platform levels that force players to use Spyro's run, jump, and flame attack in order to discover the locations of the next challenge in the area. This was the element that dragged down the fun of Crash Bandicoot Purple, and it's again the loose bolt of the entire machine in Spyro Orange. Admittedly, the platforming elements are slightly more interesting in Spyro because they require a lot more skill to control the looser controlling dragon, but the engine created for the game can't seem to handle the effect of Spyro's flamebreath without chugging in places. That, and the level designs couldn't stand on their own if they didn't have the gazillion mini-games to support 'em.
And, like Crash Bandicoot Purple, Spyro Orange suffers from the same feeling that the game ends a bit too soon. It's not as bad in the dragon adventure since the difficulty is slightly higher here, but it doesn't take more than a few hours to complete the game with the bare minimum requirements. Admittedly, there's a lot more to see when players take advantage of the trading card quest that will unlock additional challenges.
It also has a lot going for it in its focus on multiplayer gaming. Many of the challenges in the title can be played with up to four players, either with a single cartridge or a cartridge per system. And players can interface between the same game or with Crash Bandicoot Purple for competition. Additional games become available as players collect the hundred or so trading cards in the adventure, and this task is enhanced by a trading element between the two different Crash/Spyro games.
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