PDA

View Full Version : [Wii] GoldenEye 007 Review


AgtFox
11-12-2010, 08:35 AM
GoldenEye 007 Review

Title: GoldenEye 007
Platform: Wii
Developer: Eurocom (http://www.eurocom.co.uk)
Publisher: Activision Blizzard (http://www.activisionblizzard.com)
ESRB: T
MSRP: $49.99/$69.99 (Wii (http://www.amazon.com/James-Bond-007-GoldenEye-Nintendo-Wii/dp/B003O6H7X0/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1289444355&sr=8-1)/Wii w/Golden Classic Controller Pro (http://www.amazon.com/James-Bond-007-GoldenEye-Controller-Nintendo/dp/B003O6FW6E/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1289444355&sr=8-2))
Editor: Loren 'AgtFox' Halek

What's Hot: Nostalgia factor as the overall blueprint of gameplay is similar to the original; a re-imagining of the N64 original; split-screen multiplayer; graphics and sound are top notch for Wii; ability to play online

What's Not: If you are expecting a straight port from the N64 game you will be disappointed; modern day James Bond actors fill in for original movie/game actors

Let’s get this out of the way first: Activision’s GoldenEye 007 is not a straight port of the classic 1997 N64 game. It is more of a re-imagination of the game with larger maps, extra locations and a different experience altogether. Eurocom has created a pretty good game here, but expecting this to be a port from Rare’s classic will lead to disappointment if you pick up the game. What is left is a classic game built around the same type of gameplay blueprint, but brought into more modern day first-person shooter experiences.

As with the N64 game, the story is based upon the movie, Pierce Brosnan’s first as the character. However Brosnan does not appear, instead the current Bond Daniel Craig has taken his place both in looks and voice. Some might not like this change, but once you start meeting other main characters from the movie (006, Natalya, etc.) and realize that those actors have also been replaced in this re-imagining it isn’t such a big deal. In fact, even from the beginning this game goes beyond the movie, showing 006 and Bond’s double team on the Russian dam and not just Bond alone. Early on you’ll jump into a truck and be the gunman while 006 drives you to the next destination.

http://www.colonyofgamers.com/images/features/goldeneye/shot1.jpg

The name of the game is still first-person shooting and much like the original you can go through the game however you want: guns blazing or using a quieter road. The P99 is still the gun of choice in this game with the silencer, but Bond has several guns he can choose from. The graphics are far better than the original game, not a big stretch since this is 13 years and two Nintendo console systems later. The sound is also very good and the voiceovers are well done. This game isn’t as talk intensive as the Bond game I reviewed yesterday, but then again the original GoldenEyep game wasn’t very talkative either.

There are a variety of controllers you can play this with. I tried the Wiimote and Nunchuck and found it lacking, so I whipped out my classic controller and had a fantastic time of it. You can also use the Wii Zapper, the Pro controller or the GameCube controller. I haven’t had the chance to play with the Pro controller, there is version of the game that comes with that controller in a golden hue. Looking at the Pro controller that is probably the ideal controller to play this on.

As you go through the game you’ll notice the same general locations, but the scope of each map is larger and the enemies are much smarter. Instead of just standing around and letting Bond shoot them down the line with no apparent reaction here they immediately react after a cohort near them is shot dead. They don’t come as close to Bond as the enemies do in Blood Stone and there is no melee attack other than the gun smack, but generally you will be taking care of your enemies at a variety of ranges with guns.

http://www.colonyofgamers.com/images/features/goldeneye/shot2.jpg

You are most likely picking this game up for the multiplayer aspect though, something that really kept the original game going. Much like the original you can play with split screen, but you can also play online. I had to do the latter since I don’t have as many friends or family members near me as I did 13 years ago and it was generally enjoyable. You can play as a variety of Bond characters and his arch nemeses have some nice weapons that you can play with. This is a fantastic party game and will really make you nostalgic to the original game.

I have to say that GoldenEye 007 is an excellent reimagining of a fantastic game from the Nintendo 64 years. It is too bad Microsoft and Rare never got the chance to sell their port, but Activision obviously ran with the nostalgia card now that they have the property license. The thing is Eurocom has done an excellent job of reigniting the memories of long ago and as long as you don’t expect a perfect port of the original game you should be pleasantly surprised by this game. Obviously if you were into the multiplayer from the original, the stuff presented here is top notch and should keep you occupied for a while both locally and online. Highly recommended and a better overall game than Blood Stone even though it is obvious that game probably had the higher budget.

Score: 4 out of 5 CoGs
http://www.colonyofgamers.com/images/CoG4.png

Loren says, “A fantastic reimagining of the classic N64 game. Built upon the same general gameplay blueprint, but totally rebuilt and expanded, Eurocom’s version is exceptional. Multiplayer will keep you around for a long time both locally or online, something the original game didn’t have the ability to do.”

divinechaos
11-12-2010, 09:54 AM
I got this last night and it's pretty damn awesome. After finishing the first level I jumped online and I was surprised at how fun it is.

Ravenlock
11-12-2010, 11:30 AM
One nitpick - you say there's "no melee" apart from the gunsmack, but the sneaking up and eliminating enemies from behind melee attack is actually a huge part of the game, if you choose to play it stealthily. I would say on some levels almost half of my kills are of that variety, and those animations are well-done and have a lot of variety.

I also personally found the Wiimote and Nunchuk combination to be the best way to play the game, having tried both it and the Classic Controller Pro, but I suspect that's just going to come down to how you're most used to playing FPS games (I play most of mine on the PC with a mouse). I found that I could get headshots quicker and more accurately with the Wiimote, and since I try to play stealthily when I can that made the difference for me.

A mechanic I really like that didn't get brought up in the review - if you're undetected by the enemy and take one of them out with a headshot, you'll get about 1 to 2 seconds of "reaction time" (don't know what to call it, the manual didn't mention it) while the other enemies notice what's going on. You hear Bond's heartbeat and the audio gets quietly distorted. If you manage to kill them all in that time frame, you'll remain unnoticed and no alarms will go off. It's a nice touch that really encourages you to sneak around to avoid big firefights and rewards you for being quick and precise. For lack of better phrasing, it feels very Bond. For reasons like that, I wouldn't overlook the single-player campaign even if multiplayer is the primary draw. Actor replacement notwithstanding, it's very atmospheric and well-designed.

This is a really solid FPS, and one of the few games on the system where I don't feel like that needs to be appended with "for the Wii." Once my system gets back from repair, I'm really looking forward to working my way through the rest of the campaign and taking it back online again.

EDIT: Another thing unmentioned about the multiplayer is that they've implemented a somewhat CoD-esque ranking system tied to your game profile, with levels, weapon and gadget unlocks, etc. It isn't as sophisticated as something like CoD, but it is a reason to go back to the multiplayer and makes it feel like more than just the "let's play pistols this time" matches of the N64 game over and over again.

CES
11-12-2010, 05:57 PM
I would say the game is actually less of a remake of the N64 game and more based around the movie proper. Beyond two major setpieces (the start of the Dam and Facility levels) it felt much closer to the movie than the old game ever was. Of course, that's probably down to the advances in technology that let the game be more true to the source.

Stmfuller
11-12-2010, 06:13 PM
I agree with ravenlock about the wiimote. I like it much better than the classic controller, plus the wiimote has that cool tilt for around the corner peeking.
I'm pretty close to the end now and Have enjoyed all of it.

axion
11-14-2010, 10:03 AM
Do you get that reaction time always with headshots? I only noticed it when you breach a room. Is what you're talking about different from that?

Stmfuller
11-14-2010, 10:36 AM
I'm pretty sure it's only during a room breach/other "important" times.
doesn't really add anything to Goldeneye, but it does make you feel pretty cool :)

Ravenlock
11-14-2010, 02:58 PM
No, you do get the reaction time any time you get a headshot with a silenced weapon from a "stealth" status - any time you haven't been noticed by the enemy. It isn't as pronounced as the breach situations - in those instances, it literally puts everything in slow motion and becomes like a quick draw. The "reaction time" thing I'm talking about is more like a grace period before the guards figure out where you are and start shooting / alert reinforcements.

I honestly can't tell whether it also literally slows things down - if it does, it's less so than when you breach a room - but it definitely distorts the audio (I think with the heartbeat sound, but with my Wii away I can't confirm), and if you kill everyone in sight before it expires, you aren't "discovered" - no alarms sound, nobody shoots at you, and the audio noticeably snaps back to normal. I first noticed it when I was sneaking around the facility under the dam; most of the guards were in groups of two, and by taking them out quickly enough with pairs of headshots from the silenced pistol, I was able to be pretty much untouched until predetermined setpiece gunfights.

Wilkz07
11-14-2010, 04:04 PM
getting it for xmas.. going to be a long wait. got the ce edition.

Stmfuller
11-14-2010, 04:47 PM
Ravenlock: I just got done with a session and the hints section says the slowdown stuff is only for breaches.

Stmfuller
11-14-2010, 04:51 PM
also, I'm having a hellava time with the very end. Too many people to shoot...(how's the for mostly spoiler free disscussion :) )

Ravenlock
11-14-2010, 06:52 PM
Unfortunately I can't find any Youtube videos of anybody interested in playing stealthily (which strikes me as crazy, that's the most fun way to play the game). :p But you can see what I'm talking about here:

3ZVVnFmGwlg

At 2:18, he starts shooting at a guy with a silenced pistol, and there's a sound that essentially means "somebody knows you're there!" and you start hearing the heartbeat. At 2:22, after he's taken that guy out and nobody around has noticed, there's another sound that essentially means "you're back in stealth and nobody knows where you are."

At about 7:54 in the same video, there's an example of it going the other way - he blows up a barrel, and that notifies the guards, but obviously he isn't able to kill everyone in the area quick enough, so instead of getting the "back in stealth" sound, a gunfight breaks out.

It doesn't appear to involve any actual slowdown (that is clearly just in the breach sequences), but there's definitely a timing element involved where your speed in dispatching enemies determines whether or not you're noticed.

EDIT: This does also mean, I guess, that it isn't specifically tied to headshots, but any time you're noticed from stealth. Obviously, though, headshots are the easiest way to get back in stealth within the time limit. ;)

Stmfuller
11-15-2010, 05:51 AM
Oh, I know what you're talking about. Yeah, there's a period of about 5 seconds if you shoot a guard and don't headshot him OR he's there with another guard where they're like "omg wtf". If you can kill before that time is up your cover isn't exposed. If not, the alarms go off.

axion
11-15-2010, 06:40 AM
Yeah I noticed that as well, just was confused about the slowdown and stuff.

Ravenlock
11-15-2010, 06:48 AM
Right right, sorry for the confusion. Since I'm almost always zoomed in and headshotting when that happens, it seemed to me like I was getting a slight slowdown in addition to the audio cues while taking out the other guards. My misinterpretation.

Still, it is a very cool little mechanic to reward being stealthy, which was what I was getting at. GoldenEye encourages stealthy play in a more entertaining way than just about any other FPS I've played in a long time.

Stmfuller
11-16-2010, 04:42 AM
Yeah, actually the combo of stealth and being able to run and gun is what makes the game so much fun. I had a good time stealthing it out as much as possible. Then of course when I blow my cover, I love being able to shoot the shit out of all the AI players.


The one annoying thing I've noticed about the game is that the AI runs designated routes. So, the AI isn't really smart, it just goings from one way point to another. That's a big bummer...but hey...who the fuck cares Goldeneye is fun!

CES
11-16-2010, 08:01 AM
I honestly can't tell whether it also literally slows things down - if it does, it's less so than when you breach a room - but it definitely distorts the audio (I think with the heartbeat sound, but with my Wii away I can't confirm), and if you kill everyone in sight before it expires, you aren't "discovered" - no alarms sound, nobody shoots at you, and the audio noticeably snaps back to normal. I first noticed it when I was sneaking around the facility under the dam; most of the guards were in groups of two, and by taking them out quickly enough with pairs of headshots from the silenced pistol, I was able to be pretty much untouched until predetermined setpiece gunfights.

It doesn't seem to slow anything down but when you shoot someone with a supressed weapon you get 2-3 seconds of a heartbeat noise. Kill whatever enemy saw the action in that time and there's no alarm. I love that feature, it serves me well (seems to be yet another borrowed idea from MW2, you could do the same in the stealth challenges)

axion
11-16-2010, 08:05 AM
Hopped in on some multiplayer last night. By the end of my third or fourth round I was on top of the scoreboard :). My best round was 23-8 I think. Pretty fun overall, definitely want to keep playing to unlock the other modes.

biosc1
11-16-2010, 10:32 AM
Man, I played some of this last night. Using the nunchuk/wii-mote combo does not feel right. I'll have to dig out my classic controller.

JayK47
11-27-2010, 11:00 AM
I don't know how anybody can stand playing this game with the Wiimote. To be honest, I'm not that fond of the Wii. We have one, but the wife uses it and I just have had not interest in any games on it until this one. I have rented the game and I think I will send it back. I really am having a hard time with the Wiimote. I get the indicator that my Wiimote is out of the screen a lot. I just can't get used to it. I do NOT feel like a secret agent. More like a retarded side kick who has never used a gun before. I will need a regular controller. I may look into the classic pro version since I hocked my Gamecube a few years back. This is the type of game that should have come out on the 360. Period.

Ravenlock
11-27-2010, 06:40 PM
I would suggest that maybe your setup isn't quite right if you're having what sound like technical issues with it (pointer not registering as being on screen, etc), because I haven't had it once fail to do what I wanted it to do.

For reference, I'm sitting about 6 feet from the TV on a chair that puts my waist roughly equal with the height of the sensor bar, and resting my arm on my leg while pointing the Wiimote with my wrist. Very small motions are all I ever need for aiming (and, intelligently, they put the waggle stuff on the nunchuk, not the Wiimote, so you're never shaking your aiming device).

Having played with both, I can't imagine wanting to play with the Classic Controller. But that may just be my preference for a mouse (being a PC FPS player primarily) over dual analog. The Wiimote isn't a mouse, but it's much closer.

This is the type of game that should have come out on the 360. Period.

I understand where you're coming from, but I disagree. The single and multiplayer both work great within the Wii's limitations, and like I said, between the Wiimote control scheme and a dual-analog scheme I far prefer the Wiimote. I wouldn't want to play this on a 360 with dual-analog controls, having tried it the way it is now.

JayK47
11-28-2010, 09:01 AM
Unfortunately, it would be a pain to move around my living room or move the Wii to a new room just to get the optimum distance to the television. I figured I may have been too close when I was having issues with the Wiimote. Even if I had it set up just right, I really do hate the Wiimote. I can barely stand it on games where it makes sense like golf games. I picked up the Goldeneye bundle with the golden controller. I hope that controller works out.

JayVe
11-28-2010, 09:24 AM
It isn't very difficult to get a sense of where the Wii remote can see the bar, and where it can't.

Play with the sensitivity tool in the Wii system menu. Look through a digital camera at your sensor bar and make sure all the lights are working.

The Wii pointing controls are far superior to using an analog stick when it comes to FPS games.



Excellent review!

Stmfuller
11-29-2010, 06:14 AM
yeah, I can't imagine playing goldeneye on the classic controller. I had far too much fun playing it on the wiimote.
Man, goldeneye really gives legitimacy to the FPS on wii. I hope that more AAA games will make good use of the wiimote. FPS really seem to be hit or miss on the system.

Ravenlock
11-29-2010, 08:14 AM
I've mentioned them in other threads, but apparently not in this one, so: if you're looking for solid FPS on the Wii, the other games I'd recommend would be...


Red Steel 2 (single player only but a really neat FPS / brawler combo),
Call of Duty: World at War (lackluster single player campaign IMO but good multiplayer, controls well),
maybe The Conduit (pretty looking and good controls but a really hit-or-miss single player campaign, good multiplayer though, felt the most like GoldenEye on the system until GoldenEye)...

and that's about it, honestly. Oh, and Metroid Prime Trilogy if you can find it somewhere (out of print), or just Metroid Prime 3: Corruption if you can't. Haven't tried Black Ops or Modern Warfare: Reflex yet, but I assume I'd feel the same way about them as I do World at War.

Hopefully The Conduit 2 will improve on the first game in the series, and hopefully GoldenEye will succeed enough that Eurocom will be allowed to make another Bond FPS with an original storyline. I'd happily buy another one of these.

JayK47
11-29-2010, 06:44 PM
Well I think the 360 controller does pretty well for FPS games. Almost always I would prefer the PC, but I am surprised at how far the 360 has come with FPS controls. When I play games like COD or Bad Company, I don't wish I was on PC. I seem to get by just fine. I hope the classic pro feels similar to the 360 controller. And messing with settings on the Wii? Console gaming sounds more and more like PC gaming every day. Remember plug and play? Probably not since it was so long ago. Now it is sign in, DL patch, install to HD, adjust settings. You know, PC gaming.

And I may give conduit a try if I can use the classic controller;)

Ravenlock
11-29-2010, 11:36 PM
Come on now. "Messing with settings" to get your controls comfortable on the Wii is no more complicated than tweaking horizontal and vertical sensitivity sliders on analog sticks, which console games have had basically since analog sticks have existed. ;)

JayVe
11-30-2010, 07:15 PM
Well I think the 360 controller does pretty well for FPS games. Almost always I would prefer the PC, but I am surprised at how far the 360 has come with FPS controls. When I play games like COD or Bad Company, I don't wish I was on PC. I seem to get by just fine.

Wait. You do realize the only reason you get by just fine is because the computer is playing for you? There is a HUGE auto-aim built into every console shooter AND shooters have gotten slower to account for the controls.

Go on and try holding your own playing against someone on a PC using a mouse while on a 360 controller.

Seriously. Mouse trumps analog stick for pointing.

Now, I much prefer an analog stick for movement. Perhaps the team at Splitfish has it right.

Karak
12-02-2010, 10:39 AM
HOly Crap. Thanks guys, just bought this on your recommendation.
How is the pointing with the wiimote?

Ravenlock
12-02-2010, 01:22 PM
In my opinion: pretty super great.

In the opinions of others: depends who you ask. ;)

I did try the Classic Controller again last weekend for a bit, and went back to the Wiimote and nunchuk after less than an hour. Just works better.

JayK47
12-04-2010, 08:47 PM
Blew through easy mode today. Wow. The last few areas do everything bad in video games. Lets see:

-Protect someone while hordes of enemies come down on you.
-Instadeath if you go the wrong way.
-Quicktime events.

All while needing to load the whole area again when you die. I think I saw more of the load screen at the end than anything else. Not so much fun. I was having fun with the game until the end. Then it got so very frustrating. I don't know if I even want to go back to try a harder difficulty.

And do you get to use grenades in the single player? I was picking up weapons with grenade launchers, had grenades tossed at me, but I did not see anything in my inventory. Odd.

This game has little to do with the movie or the first game. More like a modern retelling loosely based on the movie. Playing on Agent is essentially like every other older FPS game. I hope the higher settings, if I choose to play them, have more variation in gameplay.

Ravenlock
12-05-2010, 12:03 AM
Well, it is a modern retelling, they never billed it as anything else. It's written by the original screenwriter on the film, and his job was to re-tool the plot for a 2010, Daniel Craig Bond. So that's what he did.

Shame if it falls apart at the end - I haven't gotten there yet - but I have a feeling I'll forgive it that, given how much fun I'm having with the game so far.

CES
12-05-2010, 03:55 AM
And do you get to use grenades in the single player? I was picking up weapons with grenade launchers, had grenades tossed at me, but I did not see anything in my inventory. Odd.

This game has little to do with the movie or the first game. More like a modern retelling loosely based on the movie. Playing on Agent is essentially like every other older FPS game. I hope the higher settings, if I choose to play them, have more variation in gameplay.

Grenade launchers are used in the same way as Goldeneye's bigger brother, CoD. Use the d-pad (at least on the normal controller).

Also, this game is actually far closer to the movie than the original game was.

Stmfuller
12-05-2010, 07:41 AM
The last few areas do everything bad in video games. Lets see:

-Protect someone while hordes of enemies come down on you.
-Instadeath if you go the wrong way.
-Quicktime events.

This is true. The protect someone while hordes of enemies come down on you was literally my least fun time when I was playing it. Mostly because I had to play it over and over and over and over and over again.
Defend yourself skank ;)

I need to come back to this, I'm sure there's a ton of mp fun that I"m missing out on.