Disney channel tarzan games




















Tarzan's not bad, but it certainly doesn't rank as a thrilling game. It demands way too much patient replaying for the average fun it offers.

He was the original Pitfall Harry and is one of the most obvious candidates for a platform adventure if there ever was one. Well now the wait is over thanks to Sony Computer Entertainment and developer Eurocom. Featuring the same fluid animation as its neo-brethren, Tarzan romps across through his fully 3D environment with a grace one would expect in a Disney-inspired game.

Although the majority of the game is played in a traditional side-scrolling format, there are plenty of 3D elements that pop up every now and again.

While not as extensive as something like Klonoa, Tarzan must occasionally venture into or out of the foreground to retrieve certain items or power-ups. There are lots of things to find as well. Knives, fruits, Tarzan Tokens, spears, parasols umbrellas to you and sketches are just some things you'll find here in the jungle.

Being that this IS the jungle, Tarzan will have to watch out for all sorts of antagonistic animals and natural hazards. Thankfully, Tarzan has a wide array of attacks to help him in his adventures. He can attack with different kinds of fruit of varying power, attack with his knife provided he finds one or use his "ground pound"' to access hidden power-ups and items.

Graphically, Tarzan is one of the most sumptuous games you'll ever play. Imagine the lush backgrounds of Crash Bandicoot , with a darker, more realistic feel and you're halfway there.

Animals crawl all over the place, birds fly in and out of the background, waterfalls and other ambient effects all conspire to create one of the most convincing 3D backdrops you'll ever find. Fortunately, the game plays pretty good as well. Timed to coincide with the release of the motion picture, Tarzan could climb into many a gamers' collection this summer.

Underneath Tarzan's level design and beautifully rendered graphics lies a straightforward--and sometimes fun--action game. Problems to watch for: Slowdown when too much stuff is going on, repetitive ungle-type levels and touchy control when jumping and swinging on vines. I do like being able to play as different characters depending on the level, but what you do in those levels as those other characters doesn't differ greatly from playing as Tarzan.

But no doubt kids will enjoy playing as the characters from the movie--especially that Rosie O'Donnell gorilla Note the sarcasm. Tarzan is a kid's game--a kid's game for kids who are pretty good at games. Sure, you might be caught off guard by the difficulty found in middle to later levels since the first few are easy.

In fact, in one particular stage I must've been hit 25 times or so and still didn't die. Overall, kids will enjoy the simple game-play, FMV cutscenes straight from the movie and the game's Disney-like graphics.

Hardcore gamers might think the game is decent, but certainly not involving enough a purchase or a rental. Tarzan was a great movie, and not bad as a video game. It's got great animation and richly detailed graphics, but firing weapons is slow and clumsy. By the time you pull out your arsenal of fruit to throw at jungle beasts, they've already hit you a few times. It's a bit repetitive, but faithfully follows the plot of the movie.

As an added bonus you can go back through the levels to find things you missed the first time round, and open up clips from the movie to watch anytime you want.

This may be a beautiful-looking game that captures the spirit and look of the movie perfectly, but what a shame the gameplay is so derivative and dull.

It may be aimed at kids, but that's no excuse for a complete lack of innovation. Running around and jumping for icons gets old fast. Sure, you get to play different characters, and the game throws in a different-styled level from time to time, but it's formulaic. Not being able to jump on baddies is weird too. Tarzan was a nice diversion from all the stuff I usually take very seriously murder simulators, fighting games, etc.

But without that context, I'm not sure Tarzan would be my thing. The visuals are pure sugar-coating; they're good like a Crash Bandicoot. The gameplay, on the other hand, was definitely geared toward younger gamers.

While I had no major "l-want-to-break-this-controller-in-half" impulses, it did feel a bit dummied down. Swim, jump, climb, swing and run through 15 levels of action, battling snakes, crocodiles and elephants to save your family from hunters.

Tarzan is set to swing into stores this summer, simultaneously with the release of Disney's movie. It seems like just about every year, Disney comes out with a new animated blockbuster movie.

This year that movie happens to be the Disney take on the legendary man of the apes, Tarzan. Since I have no children, I was really not motivated to go see this movie so when the game arrived, I had very little knowledge of its storyline. Now that I have played for a while, I feel like I have seen most of the film. Tarzan the game is your traditional semi-3D side scrolling platform game with a few different elements thrown in to break up the monotony of just trudging through level after level of the same old same old.

As with all of the Disney movies-turned-videogames, you will see beautifully drawn graphics and gameplay that is geared towards the younger audiences. So if you have not collected enough tokens coins, rings, etc in your life, grab a vine and follow me into the jungle.

If there is one thing that Disney games have going for them is that they are consistent. This game borrows a lot from the last Disney movie-game, Hercules. You spend a majority of your time on a predetermined left to right path. All the while collecting tokens to give you an extra life. If you are a fan of the side scrolling platform games, this is not a terrible one.

I will say that the younger kids may have some problems, which I will identify a bit later, but it should still be a very playable title for them. Even though I have not seen the movie, I can tell that the game does a great job of recreating the world of Tarzan.

I have seen enough previews to know what it should look like. This should help the younger gamers really feel like they are a part of the Tarzan world. In case you were not sure, you play the majority of this game as Tarzan.

You start out as a young Tarzan and as the game progresses, so does your age. I thought this alone was a great idea. Tarzan's main method of attacking enemies is by throwing assorted fruits, which can be thrown both overhand and underhand for varying throwing distances and come in 4 different levels of power marked by their colors. A knife can also be found in certain levels and used as a close-combat weapon, and certain other weapons, such as a spear and a parasol, are exclusively used in specific levels.

Tarzan's health status is represented by a life bar that depletes as he is harmed by enemies and other hazards. The health bar can be refilled by collecting bananas, which are hidden in banana trees and other areas throughout levels. Levels feature several different collectible items, such as coins that earn the player an extra life when of them are collected, and four pieces of a pencil sketch which are hidden throughout the level and unlock a bonus level when collected.

The game has three difficulty levels: easy, medium and hard. In the easy and medium difficulties, little Tarzan gets tips from his friend Terk. Tarzan's enemies are monkeys, baboons, eagles, and different animals such as snakes and bushpigs, and some humans such as Clayton. It was Digital Eclipse's first completely original video game which they had developed and designed from scratch, as their previous efforts had all been ports of other games.

The game's development team was given 3 months to develop the game, and consisted of two programmers, ten artists and three level designers. According to the game's technical director, Mike Mika, the initial design concept for the game was 'quite ambitious,' with several gameplay mechanics needing to be nixed due to time constraints. According to Mika, the team wanted to include gameplay objectives which were given to the player by talking to and interacting with non-playable characters, and had concepts for several mechanics which went unincorporated, such as levels which involved riding on top of birds and levels that featured Tantor the elephant as a playable character.

Disney's Tarzan received positive reviews upon its release, with critics praising the game's graphics and its faithfulness towards the film's story. Before downloading make sure that your PC meets minimum system requirements. Minimum System Requirements.



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