

That's a good thing, too the game looks slick and well-defined in its pixel art, with some really excellent, fluid animation for the turtle characters and enemies. All of the visuals have been drawn up using pixelart - other than screengrabs from the movie, you'd have a hard time finding a single computer rendered object in the cartridge. TMNT's old-school gameplay is amplified by its welcome old-school presentation. You can buy a wall jump, additional offensive or defensive power, or even extend the duration of the combo strings so you can get that counter high into the double digits for kick-ass points. Downed enemies will drop money which can be converted into extras, provided you get through the level with enough extra lives. The moves list might be limited, but the game allows for some killer attacks - kick enemies into each other, pick up downed enemies and throw them into a group, deflect projectiles back at the thrower.even toss a rubber tire into a mob of enemies and watch it bounce back and forth into one another. It helps that the game features a satisfying combat system where players can juggle enemies upwards multiple times and kick others while the first enemies are still airborne.

A ticker on the side of the screen keeps track of how many hits you nail characters with in succession, and rewards points and experience based on how high you can get that number. This game has a really excellent amount of technique that encourages players to string together moves in order to pull off an impressive combo. In fact, I'm sure that River City Ransom was used as a reference when the TMNT team went to work on the Game Boy Advance version. It comes close to being as classic an action game as River City Ransom, if you can believe it. Yes, it's a kick-punch-throw game like Double Dragon and Final Fight, but the design team programmed in some of the most satisfying action seen in not just a GBA brawler, but in any brawlers. The designers clearly wanted to bring back that old-school feel of the original Konami arcade game, but infused a shellload of technique into the mix. But imagine that arcade game idea, with actual depth added to it. The re-release of the original arcade game on Xbox Live Arcade brings its cheap shallowness to surface - it's certainly nice to romp down memory lane, but that sort of game just wouldn't fly today. It had cheap mechanics that were made intentionally cheap, simply to suck quarters out of players' pockets. It was shallow but rewarding in a mindless sort of way, but the lack of any sort of technique was its ultimate downfall. These two games featured some crazy old-school brawling action that threw tons of enemies on-screen for players to beat up. For those that love those games, or even Double Dragon-style brawlers in general, don't let this one pass you by.Īnyone talking about videogames featuring the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles will eventually start waxing nostalgic about the original arcade game and its sequel, TMNT: Turtles in Time.

But in the case of the GBA, it's the way cooler product: TMNT on the Game Boy Advance is one hell of a surprise and an incredibly fun throwback to the old-school Turtles arcade game. Just as the Nintendo DS development team approached its TMNT project with an original mindset, so did Ubisoft's GBA team. Just when you think the Game Boy Advance's life is over and merely a dumping ground for quickly developed Rugrats and Spongebob games, a game comes around to show that there's still a little bit of life left in Nintendo's handheld system.
