E3 06: Superman Returns first look

For comic-book fans, the name "Superman" means many things: selflessness, hope, indomitable strength. For gamers, though, it simply means "run." As in, "run away from the video-game store until the menace passes safely into bargain bins."

So as you can imagine, Superman Returns has a tough row to hoe. Not only does it carry the stigma of being a movie-licensed game, but it also bears the name of a hero who hasn't produced a decent game since 1988's Superman arcade game. Even so, what we've seen of Superman Returns so far has gotten our deflated hopes up.

Like Spider-Man 2 and The Incredible Hulk: Ultimate Destruction, Superman Returns doesn't force players into a linear structure. Instead, you're given free rein to explore the great big city of Metropolis, with all of Superman's powers at your disposal. There's a storyline that ties into the movie (as well as creating plenty of its own scenarios), but you can spend as much time as you want between missions just flying around and doing Superman things.

From what we've seen so far, just that by itself is pretty impressive. Metropolis is truly huge, and Superman can go from walking around on the ground to soaring above its skyscrapers in a matter of seconds. You'll be able to use his ice breath, heat vision and super strength however you see fit, even to the point of destroying property and tossing around cars. You can also use it to fight enemies, of course, and that's where Superman Returns sets itself apart.

Because you're not flying around some under-powered version of the Man of Steel, the developers wanted to make sure that Superman faces appropriate challenges. So instead of being constantly hassled to stop carjackers or purse-thieves, you'll be called on to battle aliens, supervillains and other foes worthy of taking on Superman. Also, because Supes in indestructible, the only way for him to "die" is to fail to save the people he's trying to protect.

In any case, flying around a gigantic, seamless city with free rein to use Superman's powers looks like a lot of fun. Assuming EA doesn't choke on the follow-through by giving us a bunch of boring missions where we have to fly through rings, this could be the game that finally gets Superman right.

May 11, 2006

CATEGORIES
Mikel Reparaz
After graduating from college in 2000 with a BA in journalism, I worked for five years as a copy editor, page designer and videogame-review columnist at a couple of mid-sized newspapers you've never heard of. My column eventually got me a freelancing gig with GMR magazine, which folded a few months later. I was hired on full-time by GamesRadar in late 2005, and have since been paid actual money to write silly articles about lovable blobs.
Latest in Adventure
Pokemon Go players brace for the worst as Niantic is sold off for $3.5 billion: "This game is entering its death knell"
Pokemon Go player trying to catch a Croagunk
Pokemon Go developer Niantic is being bought for $3.5 billion, CEO says it'll help its games be "'forever games' that will endure for future generations"
Lapras seen in the Pokemon anime.
Former Pokemon world champ uses a "stupid strategy" that "should never work" to transform a Lapras into an OHKO machine so powerful it can even take out enemies in alternate dimensions
Minecraft Diamond Armor
Minecraft Pocket Edition got its name because one of its devs was a big "Nintendo nerd" who wanted to pay homage to the Game Boy Pocket
an ai chatbot plays a modded verion of pokemon red and jumps down a ledge to talk to an npc
An AI's mission to 'teach' itself Pokemon Red is going as well as you think - after escaping Cerulean City after tens of hours, it went right on back
Pokemon Legends Z-A screenshot showing Mega Charizard
Pokemon Legends Z-A's visuals aren't "great" say former Nintendo marketing leads, but hope Switch 2 could allow Game Freak to "go back to the drawing board" and add more detail to future RPGs
Latest in News
Overwatch 2
My hopes for an Overwatch anime or Diablo horror movie are going strong as Blizzard president points out "we are Blizzard Entertainment, and not simply Blizzard Games"
The New Thunderbolts leaping into action
Marvel's New Thunderbolts* comic steals the MCU's asterisk, and the reason why is just as big of a mystery
Pokemon Go players brace for the worst as Niantic is sold off for $3.5 billion: "This game is entering its death knell"
Stamp PSP
A 16-year-old pitch for a newly discovered first-party PSP game has me mourning the death of PlayStation's Japan Studio all over again
Astarion from Baldur's Gate 3
Baldur's Gate 3 Astarion actor Neil Newbon says he "got rid of" agents who deliberately kept him away from video game gigs: "They just didn't want me to do it"
Mass Effect
Jennifer Hale says she didn't see a single line as Mass Effect's Commander Shepard until it was time to record: "It was all cold reading on the spot"