Godzilla Unleashed: Double Smash review

Weak graphics and gameplay make Godzilla Unleashed about as fresh as the radioactive lizard's toxic breath

12DOVE Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Nice selection of monsters

  • +

    Kiddies might enjoy co-op

  • +

    Re-gifting this game

Cons

  • -

    Awful visual presentation

  • -

    Painfully repetitive gameplay

  • -

    Bosses offer no challenge

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Dec 5, 2007

Godzilla Unleashed: Double Smash provides the perfect example of a promising game concept failing to yield a good game. In theory Double Smash sounds like a fantastic fit for the Nintendo DS; control two of your favorite Godzilla universe-based beasties simultaneously in a side-scrolling beat-'em-up. Take to the skies on the upper display as a winged menace such as Mothra, and unleash destruction on the bottom screen as the skyscraper-stomper himself, Godzilla. Toss in a long line-up of playable ferocious favorites - Megalon, King Ghidorah, Battra, Fire Rodan - and single cart co-op play, and we're on this like radioactive sludge on a Tokyo sewer pipe. So, why is this brimming-with-potential title nearly unplayable?

For starters the visual presentation is weak; it's apparently meant to look stylized and anime, but it comes off too rough around the edges. PC-based Flash games and early GBA titles have delivered better graphics. Despite globe-trotting to the world's biggest cities, the action slowly scrolls past bland and repetitive backgrounds; whether you're in Tokyo or Sydney everything looks pretty much the same. And the monsters don't fare much better, as your favorite fire-breathing bad-asses are reduced to ugly, detail-starved smudges.

The creative well runs just as dry in the gameplay department; on both screens you'll button-mash through some limited character animations - jump, punch, kick - destroying a few fighter plane models up top and projectile-spitting boats below, over and over again. The action is broken up by mid and end-level boss fights, but even here, where the game could have redeemed itself, we're subjected to plodding encounters offering almost no challenge. Using the same basic move set, you'll slowly tick away at each boss' too-long life meter, with absolutely no fear of dying.

More info

GenreFighting
DescriptionA side-scrolling actioner that stomps if by land, energy blasts if by sea, and loves the idea of giant monsters meeting even larger monsters - and beating them down.
Platform"DS","PSP","Wii","PS2"
US censor rating"Everyone 10+","Everyone 10+","Everyone 10+","Everyone 10+"
UK censor rating"","","",""
Release date1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK)
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Matt Cabral
A full-time freelance writer based in Lizzie Borden's hometown, Matt Cabral has covered film, television, and video games for over a decade. You can follow him on Twitter @gamegoat, friend him on Facebook, or find him in the basement of an abandoned building hoarding all the canned goods, med-kits, and shotgun shells.