|
Time travelling dinosaurs
and a World War II fighter pilot, does that sound bizarre
to you? Thought you might think so, this is the story behind
Dino Stalker, but although the story line isn't up to much
it does mean there is loads of dinosaur slaying to be done.
Dino Stalker plays like most light gun games, you will move
on from one level to another occasionally picking up the odd
health pack or weapon upgrade along the way. The main difference
with Dino Stalker is that the camera isn't on rails, so you
will move around the levels while blasting dinosaurs.
You may play Dino Stalker with a G-Con 2
light gun using the D-pad on the back of the gun to move around,
but using a single hand to move and shoot is a difficult task
and it will tire your arm out quicker than the average light
gun. Alternatively you can use a dual shock 2 controller but
the targeting cross-hair is far too sensitive, you will find
yourself dealing with over correction though out the game.
The third option is to use the light gun and the dual shock
controller in tandem, using the duel shock D-pad for movement
and the light gin strictly for shooting only. This option
is by far the best of the three, but it doesn't make up for
the slow movement or the inability to look up and down, you
will spend a lot of time fighting the control system as well
as the dinosaurs.
Dino Stalker isn't one of the best looking
PS2 games on the market; well it doesn't even graphically
stand up to most light gun games either. The dinosaurs themselves
are the best-presented aspect of Dino Stalker with good modelling
and animation. You will be treated to some pre-rendered cut
scenes in between levels but they are not too impressive either.
The sound in Dino Stalker is also pretty unimpressive, the
gun sounds are quite good though but the shrieking dinosaurs
and the sound track aren't anything to write home about.
Dino Stalker doesn't really excel in any
one area of its design, it would have been much more playable
if Capcom had left out the Gun Survivor control scheme and
just left the movement on rails like other light gun games.
The game is loosely linked to the Dino Crisis games but there's
not a lot to draw fans from the series and with some superior
light gun games for the PS2 there is not really any reason
to buy Dino Stalker unless you love slaughtering dinosaurs.
4.5
out of 10
|