12DOVE Verdict
Pros
- +
Tight control and gameplay
- +
Transformations work well
- +
Detailed
- +
colorful graphics
Cons
- -
Huge world means navigation problems
- -
Dated lives system + big map = bad fit
- -
World peace still elusive after 500 years
Why you can trust 12DOVE
If Capcom weren't so fond of tacking on new suffixes every so often, Mega Man ZX would be somewhere around the 30th 2D Mega Man action game. What can you say, in an age of intelligent robots the world is easily imperiled. Given its excessive reuse, it's no surprise that the formula can get stale sometimes. Mega Man ZX is Capcom's latest attempt to freshen things up again, and it does so by delivering an explorable, Metroid-style world that replaces the series' traditionally discrete action stages. While this worked smashingly for latter-day Castlevania, the wide-open design turns out to be something of a sideways step for Mega Man, adding more annoyance than awe.
ZX's plotline is mildly creative, setting the action some 500 years after the events of the Game Boy AdvanceMega Man Zero games. Rogue android Mavericks are still terrorizing humans, and it falls to one of two heroes, a boy or a girl, to take on the rampaging robots and discover who's behind them.
They can do this through the magic of bio-metal, leftover artifacts of the previous age that contain the essence of past heroes. Soon after the game begins you'll receive X's bio-metal, letting you transform into a pretty credible facsimile of the legendary blue platformer hero. A bit later that form is replaced by Zero's, changing the focus from shooting to sword-slashing. From then on you'll continue to find bio-metals throughout the game, adding more robotic transformations - and seriously useful abilities, like flight - to your arsenal of tricks.
More info
Genre | Action |
Description | A new start for Capcom's enduring series, ZX adds a huge explorable world to the formula. Hope you brought a map. |
Franchise name | Mega Man |
UK franchise name | Mega Man |
Platform | "DS" |
US censor rating | "Everyone" |
UK censor rating | "12+" |
Alternative names | "Megaman ZX" |
Release date | 1 January 1970 (US), 1 January 1970 (UK) |
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