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==Gameplay==
==Gameplay==
The game was a [[virtual camera system|third-person]] action/platform/shooter. The enemies are aliens that appear and teleport within the background around the player based on the events that are triggered as the player explores each and every environment. The game also had a strong platform element with elements such as rotating 3D sections which have to be navigated while shooting at enemies. The puzzle elements were limited to simple “Find The Switch To Proceed” scenarios. However, some of the elements within the game required the player to utilize different weaponry in certain situations and points in order to progress and advance to the next area.
The game was a [[virtual camera system|third-person]] action/platform/shooter. The enemies are aliens that appear and teleport within the background around the player based on the events that are triggered as the player explores each and every environment. The game also had a strong platform element with elements such as rotating 3D sections which have to be navigated while shooting at enemies. The puzzle elements were limited to simple “Find The Switch To Proceed” scenarios. However, some of the elements within the game required the player to utilize different weaponry in certain points in order to progress and advance to the next area.


==Plot==
==Plot==

Revision as of 06:20, 28 May 2012

Blasto
Developer(s)Sony Interactive
Publisher(s)Sony Computer Entertainment America
Platform(s)PlayStation
Genre(s)Third-person shooter
Mode(s)Single-player

Blasto was a third-person shooter game developed by Sony Interactive and released by Sony Computer Entertainment America on the Sony PlayStation in 1998. Although heavily marketed, the game had proved to be rather too difficult for many gamers. “There’s a good game here – it’s just simply hidden under many layers of frustration.” [1] The late Phillip Hart had voiced Captain Blasto, an extremely muscular, alien-fighting, gun-totting, dimwitted space captain who’s always in the mood for a babe from any solar system most specifically in the Planet Uranus.

Gameplay

The game was a third-person action/platform/shooter. The enemies are aliens that appear and teleport within the background around the player based on the events that are triggered as the player explores each and every environment. The game also had a strong platform element with elements such as rotating 3D sections which have to be navigated while shooting at enemies. The puzzle elements were limited to simple “Find The Switch To Proceed” scenarios. However, some of the elements within the game required the player to utilize different weaponry in certain points in order to progress and advance to the next area.

Plot

After having been banished into and upon returning from the 5th dimension, the diabolical alien tyrant named Bosc is bent on conquering the Planet Uranus along with his army of Pear Troops and legions of uraniants and attempts to invade and destroy the Earth as well. He is seeking to reign supreme with his ambitious and terrifying power over the solar system that involves his vast, dreadful alien army capturing and enslaving the Space Babes throughout across the galaxy. Thus, Captain Blasto is the only hero who can foil him and his evil ambitions and set out to rescue all the stranded Space Babes along the way in his quest for adventure. Blasto is also the only type of hero who doesn't mind catching Space Babes in distress every now and then, especially when it comes to exploring and venturing across through the Planet Uranus!

Reception

Although not very well-received by most gamers, critics, reviews and publications, the reviews have mentioned that the game was only worth playing just for Phillip Hart’s voice acting alone. Blasto would also mark one of Hart's last projects. The game was released just a few weeks before his untimely death. A sequel entitled Blasto 2 was supposedly planned for development but was ultimately cancelled due to Hart's untimely death.