12DOVE Verdict
Pros
- +
Charming
- +
elegant gameplay
- +
Freestyle mode
- +
Sharing tracks on the internet
Cons
- -
Controls need work
- -
Tough to pay for formerly free game
- -
Story mode a bit too kiddie-hip
Why you can trust 12DOVE
The original Line Rider was one of those perfect, free PC games that you could understand in seconds and play it for hours. You just drew a line - including bumps, jumps, and even loops - and watched as your little sledder launched himself down it, hopefully safely. Line Rider 2: Unbound takes that same premise and adds in better graphics, a story, and a price tag. Is it worth it?
The answer to that question is: Probably. But it’s not a slam dunk. The gameplay is still captivating, and there are multiple modes now. Free-form is the original do-whatever mode, and Puzzle Creation focuses upon exactly what you’d expect. These also add several new kinds of line, which help Bosh speed up, slow down, pull tricks, bounce, and so on.
Then comes story mode, in which your sledder Bosh has a black-clad rival and a female love interest, and the tracks are pre-made. Well, mostly pre-made – there are missing bits that you have to draw in yourself to make sure Bosh makes it to the bottom without snapping his spine in two.
It’s all good, but it’s still a simple premise that wears out sooner rather than later for most folks – a free game that lasts this long is great, but when we’re shelling out actual money, we have higher expectations. Plus, the Wii Remote isn’t precise enough for the fine tuning you’re going to be doing, so expect more cramped hands and tedious redos than you might imagine. This is actually a big enough pain for us to knock a point off the Wii version’s score. Still, the magical appeal of the title remains, and the ability to share tracks via the internet could keep the marshmallows and cocoa flowing longer for devoted players. It’s impossible not to recommend this one for at least a rental.
Nov 7, 2008
More info
Genre | Puzzle |
Description | The idea is a simple one: you draw a line on the screen and a little man in a woolly scarf tears along it until a lump, a bump or a ramp causes him to come off his toboggan and fly though the air. Lack of content and wobbly controls slightly mar an otherwise captivating experience. |
Platform | "Wii","DS","PC" |
US censor rating | "Everyone","Everyone","Everyone" |
UK censor rating | "3+","3+","3+" |
Alternative names | "Line Rider" |
Release date | 1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK) |
Final Fantasy 14 is coming to mobile so sprouts can experience the "grandeur of the original's story and combat," and card game sickos like me have another way to play Triple Triad
As Remedy nearly breaks even with Alan Wake 2 sales, Sam Lake tells investors "we strive to create commercial hits" but "we must never lose" the studio's special sauce
DC says Absolute Batman is already the best-selling comic of 2024