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Boogie (video game)

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Boogie
North American cover
Developer(s)EA Montreal
Publisher(s)Electronic Arts
Platform(s)Wii, PS2, DS[3]
ReleaseWii:
United States August 9 2007[1]
European Union August 31 2007[1]
PS2/Nintendo DS:
Fall 2007[2]
Genre(s)Music
Mode(s)Single player, Multiplayer, Story

Boogie is a music video game developed by Electronic Arts for the Wii, PlayStation 2 and Nintendo DS. Being touted as a party-game, it enables players to create their character, then use the Wii Remote and a microphone to sing and dance through it.[4] Each song within the game can be performed either as a karaoke or as a dancing game. The game is based around an alien theme. It will be one of the first games to be released in Brazil for the Wii.

Gameplay

The karaoke gameplay is similar to other singing games such as SingStar and Karaoke Revolution. The game comes packaged with a USB microphone.[5] To score, the player must sing in time and in tune with the lyrics as they scroll at the bottom of the screen, with a musical staff to indicate the correct pitch and where the player's current pitch is. Rather than using phonetic detection, the game bases the score on how well the player matches the rhythm and pitch.

The dancing portion uses the Wii Remote and optionally the Nunchuk attachment. As the song plays, the player must move the remote left, right, down or up in time with the beat of the song to earn points. Like EA's SSX games, repeating the same movements will reduce the player's score, so the player must continually string together different orders of movements, as well as changing the dancing style.[6] A "boogie meter" fills with successful dance steps and strings of dance steps. While filled, the player can attempt a special dance move by holding down a button on the remote and then following the exact order of steps (4 to 6 steps long) that comes up. Successful execution of these steps in order and in time with the music will perform that move, while failure will detract some of the boogie meter. The player can move about the dance floor, picking up tokens, score multipliers, and boogie meter boosts when they appear. If the Nunchuk is used, the player will be given special solo sections where they can control the character's facial expression while a phrase of music goes by. Additionally, the user can enter a "Strike a Pose" mode, requiring them to tilt the Nunchunk to have the on-screen character point at an ever-decreasing set of targets for additional points. While the player can also use the basic dancing controls in karaoke mode, these do not affect the score there.

During the story mode, covering five chapters for each of the five characters in the game, the player can only advance after achieving a minimum score on the game. In regular play mode, their score is rated against pre-set scores for performances, and are rewarded with tokens for how good the performance was. Tokens can be used in the in-game store to unlock additional songs, stages, and outfits for character customization.

Players have the ability to create music videos of regular performances, which can include switching camera positions and adding screen effects.

Boogie features competitive and co-operative local multiplayer modes.

Songs

In-game screen shot of Boogie

It was announced by EA on July 10, 2007 that there will be 39 confirmed songs.[7] All songs are covers of the original tracks.

Characters

Boogie features the following distinct characters or "Boogs":

  • Bubba
  • Jet
  • Julius
  • Kato
  • Lea

Customization

Boogie allows the user to customize their character in a variety of ways. Characters can have their clothing, shoes, skin, hair, and accessories customized. [8]

Reception

Despite positive early reviews from the Official Nintendo Magazine and Gamepro, who gave it an 81% and a 4 out of 5 respectively, Boogie received mostly negative reviews. 1UP.com gave Boogie a 3 out of 10, saying it was fun for only 20 minutes and criticizing the shallow gameplay. Gamespot rewarded Boogie 5.5 out of 10, citing that the karaoke does not work right (e.g. If you make any noise it would give you full points) and that the single player mode was flat-out lame. IGN awarded Boogie with a 4.5 out of 10, complaining about overly simplified controls and the whole control system in general. Nevertheless, IGN also stated that they would like to see a sequel with a much more solid gameplay since Boogie had potential. The Nintendo Power magazine awarded this game a 5.5 out of 10, saying that the game's difficulty was much too easy. X-Play gave Boogie a 1 out of 5 because it "lacks a challenge" and that the metronomes from both the Wii Remote and the TV speakers were out of sync.

Boogie currently holds a 65.9% ranking on Gamerankings.[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "EA Press Release". {{cite web}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |1= (help)
  2. ^ http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=28351
  3. ^ http://www.gamesindustry.biz/content_page.php?aid=28351
  4. ^ Rob Purchese (March 22, 2007). "EA reveals Boogie". Eurogamer.
  5. ^ IGN: Boogie Hands-on
  6. ^ Boogie Hands-On, New Screens
  7. ^ http://wii.ign.com/articles/802/802717p1.html
  8. ^ Wiitube: Boogie Character Customization Trailer
  9. ^ [Gamerankings.com.http://www.gamerankings.com/htmlpages2/938735.asp?q=Boogie]
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