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Tag Archive for Videogames

Halo 3

With my busy schedule, I have become much more of a videogame voyeur than a game player.  The number of times in a week I can actually get my hands on a controller (other than to help my 2-yr old conquer the first level of Zapper…  again) can be counted on the tines of a pickle fork.  To this end, I am getting really tired of watching Halo 3 on XBox Live.  Don’t get me wrong, it’s a sweet sweet game, but I can only watch so many hours of Spartan on Spartan deathmatch.  Zombies would be nice, I could do with a couple of hours of a zombie apocalypse.  Or perhaps giant bugs?  Giant man-eating world-smashing insect aliens would be a nice change of pace.  I can see I’m going to have to hit up the local game store for my Christmas Shopping this year or the 360 is going to suffer a mysterious, catastrophic failure to connect…

Lego Batman

I’ve got three kids and, being an avid gamer myself (when I can scrape the minutes together) they are all, of course, gamers themselves.  My oldest (now 7) finished Halo2 at the age of 4 (yes, on EASY, he was 4 at the time).  My middle child prefers transactional games, any game where points can be collected to attain new and nifty stuff is fair game.  Interestingly enough, the Lego games allow for this as well, so as you can imagine, my 360 pretty much runs 24/7 around here.

So Lego Batman.  Of the run of Lego Licenses (Star Wars, Indiana Jones and Batman) so far, I think this title is probably the best.  Mainly because, compared to the others, it is not tied to any specific film, but rather to “Batman” as a whole.  We have a cast of classic villains (Yes, the Mad Hatter IS a Batman villain) which greatly reduces the frustration the kids feel when a “boss” escapes repeatedly (although this was used to great effect in Lego: StarWars 1, with the constant persuit of Jango Fett, it wore thin with younger kids after a while).  The puzzles are engaging, but not so tough they can’t be figured out given enough trial and error and the Lego styling makes a reasonably challenging game much more accessible to the 12 and under set.  In fact, kids who are not normally gamers seem to find it worth dying over and over to accomplish the goals (and some seem to simply leap their character off a cliff repeatedly just to watch the pips explode in all directions).

As an entertaining game for kids of all ages, and certainly something more family-friendly than the recent Batman film (which I *loved* but I think I want to wait a couple years before exposing my 7 yr old to *that* iteration of the Joker).  All in all I’d give this a 5 out of 5.