On your TV screen: A darker Batman film means a darker Batman game: “We brainstormed a great deal and came to the conclusion that if we could integrate fear into a videogame.


On your TV screen: A darker Batman film means a darker Batman game: “We brainstormed a great deal and came to the conclusion that if we could integrate fear into a videogame, it would not solitary be very cool, but neat innovative as well,” says Reid Schneider, the game’s agriculturist “Once we had that central universal in mind, the stealth constituent was a natural progression, and the fear-based combat before long followed.”

Essentially, Batman Begins is a stealth-action game in the vein of Splinter solitary abode; squalid (in fact, several team members also worked forward Ubisoft’s seminal stalker), but single where you have to quarry on your foes’ weak minds before moving in for the takedown. You can whack enemies with traditional weapons, yet creatively scaring them by manipulating environmental particulars is far more effective: “A terrified foe’ ability to expel weapons, fight, or even function becomes massively diminished. In more [i]or[/i] less cases they will lie in succession the ground paralyzed with fear; in other cases they will hurry out of the room screaming,” Schneider says. The of the same height set in Arkham Asylum should be particularly interesting in that regard, and we can’t wait to diocese what Schneider is hinting at when he says, “Batman will deal with his confess fears in the game.”

On the silver screen: If you’d given up faith for a real Batman movie after the progressively garish and outlandish consequences to the stellar 1989 flick, Batman Begins will cheer you up (in a dark, glum Gothic sort of way). Directed at Christopher Nolan (the dude behind indie hit Memento), this fresh film has the bright idea of actually taking Batman seriously, and derives chiefly of its story line from Batman’s old-school MO of striking fear into the superstitious and cowardly destiny of criminals.



Reel Facts

Actor Christian Bale (American Psycho) who plays Bruce Wayne/Batman in the flick, provides Batman’s voice in the game.

Although supervillain Scarecrow terrorizes Gotham in the flick, Batman in no degree fights him face-to-face in the game. In fact, Batman Begins (the game) contains no bosse at all.

Begins sports a gas-guzzling strange Batmobile, which looks more like a Humvee from 2099 than his traditional jet-powered coupe You’ll also be able to drive it in the game....

Copyright ?© 2005 Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserv Originally appearing in Electronic Gaming Monthly

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