Burnout Paradise (PS3)
Who wants to go fast? Let's see a show of hands, people.
1/29/2008 12:00 AM | 0 Comments | Page 3 of 3
What's Hot: Open world gives the game a more organic, sandbox quality; Terrific sense of speed; Seamless transition to online; Least annoying DJ in videogame history
What's Not: Somewhat repetitive events; Showtime = not nearly as good as Crash mode; Some dead zones in the cityscape; Unsurprising soundtrack; No horn
Scott Jones
Status: Coffee makes me feel 4-percent sexier.
Beyond that, there are 400 Do Not Enter/Private Property fences through which to crash, billboards through which to smash, and Super Jumps to discover, and you can always go online via the game's seamless offline-to-online interface. You can gather friends or rivals (eight total) via the Net, setting up group events or working through the game's dullish online "challenges." (Fellow Crispyite Evan Narcisse and I completed a few of these challenges, one of which involved us spending about 15 minutes driving to a specific bridge in the game, then trying to get our timing right so we could collide in midair. Let's just say that no one, not even my own mother, would be proud of me for completing this challenge.)
Paradise gets off to a terrific start, making it the most accessible game in the series. After only a few hours of gameplay, you'll have a garage full of vehicles and a good percentage of the game under your belt. The stinginess and frustrating moments that vexed previous Burnouts -- in particular,
Burnout 3: Takedown and the PS2-only
Burnout: Dominator (neither of which did I finish) -- have largely been expunged. There are far fewer of the drive-perfectly-or-start-again Burning Route events. Having a wider range of events from which to choose does help resolve that issue. But beyond that, it feels like there's a more gentle ramp-up in difficulty in
Paradise, as opposed to the frustrating challenge spikes that were commonplace in the previous games.
In the end, none of
Paradise's flaws prove to be fatal. A bit more event variety would have been nice, sure, but from start to finish, the whole thing cruises along so smoothly that it's nearly impossible not to be seduced by the game.
This review was based on a retail copy of the game provided by the publisher.