REVIEW : Rayman Origins (PS VITA/ PC)

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Rayman Origins is a platform game developed and published by Ubisoft for PlayStation 3, Wii, Xbox 360, PlayStation Vita, Nintendo 3DS and Microsoft Windows.

The game was released on November 15, 2011 in North America, November 24, 2011 in Australia and November 25, 2011 in Europe for PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Wii. It was released later for PlayStation Vita, Microsoft Windows and Nintendo 3DS. The story follows Rayman, his friend Globox and two teensies as they fight Darktoons and other evil creatures that have infected the Glade of Dreams. A sequel, Rayman Legends, is currently in development.

GAMEPLAY

Rayman Origins is a side-scrolling platformer, the same style as the original Rayman game. Rayman Origins is playable with up to four local players who may drop in or out at any time. Players can choose to control either Rayman, Globox or two Teensies, with additional costumes available as the game progresses.

Players travel through each level, fighting enemies and rescuing imprisoned Electoons. As the game progresses, players gain new abilities such as running up walls, gliding in midair, swimming and shrinking in size to reach new areas. Certain segments also sees players riding a mosquito, where players can shoot enemies or suck them up and fire them. If a character is hit by an enemy or obstacle, he will inflate into a ballooned state until another player can bring him back into the game by slapping him, similar to New Super Mario Bros. Wii, although players can collect hearts that will protect them from one hit. However, if all players are inflated simultaneously, or if a character is hit during single play, play returns to the last checkpoint. Throughout each level, players can collect gold-coloured Lums, and when a character collects a Lum King it temporarily doubles the smaller Lums value.

There are also Skull Coins placed in hidden or dangerous areas that are worth 25 Lums each should they be successfully collected.In order to progress through certain parts of the story, players need to free Electoons. The most common way to get Electoons is to free them from cages; there is one at the end of each level, with more to be found in hidden areas. More Electoons can be earned by collecting a certain amount of Lums within a level and clearing Time Trials that are unlocked after clearing a level once. Scoring high marks in either of these challenges can also earn medals and trophies. Players can also unlock special ‘treasure chest’ levels, in which they must chase a runaway treasure chest across a dangerous course in order to receive a ruby tooth.Completing all of the teeth grants access to the incredibly challenging Land of the Livid Dead.

That bit of whimsy comes courtesy of Christophe Héral, a musician/composer who’s worked on Ubisoft games since 1999.For Rayman: Origins, Héral’s soundtrack channels the beautiful incongruity that powers Michel Ancel’s latest game. Rayman: Origins looks like it sprang to life from a sketchbook—which it kinda did—but it’s powered by the cutting-edge UbiArt Framework engine. The music feels the same way: analog yet digital, primitive yet sophisticated.

 

REVIEW OVERVIEW
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review-rayman-origins-ps-vita-pcThis is one of the latest game that i've enjoyed playing alone and with my friends,its's a funny sounding,funny and crisp looking side scrolling game which can be enjoyed on multiple platforms (i hate exlusive nonsense!!!) with your friends because it's coo-op mode is one of the best features as you can progess through the scene jumping and collecting electoons with your friends.The r.origin got an very cartoonish funny feel to it which is perfectly shown by it's cut scenes as you progess through the game.

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