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Bullet Witch - M

Bullet Witch
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3 stars

Mediocre but graphically gory sci-fi shooter.

Publisher: Atari Category/Genre: Video Games - Action/Adventure Platform: Xbox 360 Price: $49.95 Online Enabled: Yes Graphics: Not bad, especially the environments, but hardly pushing the Xbox 360. Playability: Difficult controls flaw this relatively short sci-fi action shooter. Reading Level: Light Release Date: 02/27/2007 ESRB Rating: M for blood, language, violence

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Common Sense Note

Parents need to know that this is a violent sci-fi shooter in which players shoot at all kinds of demons. Many of the demons are reduced to a pile of mush, often spurting blood out in all directions. The enemies don't look like people. Beasts include one with a deformed face coming out of its chest and another that looks like a giant floating brain. Kids will hear "Oh s--t" and a few phrases containing "damn."

Families can talk about how, in this sci-fi shooter, your role is to rid the world of demonic beasts. When playing a shooter game, does it make a difference who your enemy is -- a demonic beast versus an evil person? Why is violence in video games such a hot topic for parents with kids? Why do you think many parents believe kids should not play M-rated games?

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Common Sense Review

Reviewed By: Marc Saltzman

Things are not looking good for the human race in Atari's BULLET WITCH, a slightly above-average sci-fi shooter for the Microsoft Xbox 360. This third-person shooter takes place in the year 2013, after our planet has suffered fatalities in the billions because of natural disasters, war, and infectious diseases. As if this weren't enough, an interdimensional portal has also opened up, allowing demons to seep through and attack those few remaining people.

This is where you come in. You play as Alicia Claus, a beautiful witch who is as powerful with her magic spells as she is deft with a trigger finger. She wields a huge "gun-rod," a kind of broom-shaped weapon that can be upgraded over time.

But gun battles with hoards of demons get tiring after a while. For one, while some might hide for cover, the not-so-bright creatures basically stand there and let you shoot them down one by one. Another issue is that the action sequences repeat often, which works something like this: fight baddies, move ahead and watch a short story sequence, then fight more baddies and move ahead toward the end of the level. You start with the gun-rod as a machine gun, but in time it can be switched to a shotgun, sniper rifle, and Gatling gun.

Magic spells, however, produce a more exhilarating effect than the predictable gunplay. Pressing the left or right shoulder button brings up a magic wheel, enabling you to spin and select what kind of magic spell to invoke -- if you've earned enough skill points to unlock it. Highlights include "Willpower," which creates a shock wave that sends nearby objects hurling toward enemies, and "Lightning," where Alicia summons a bolt that kills the enemy instantly. Visually speaking, the effects of these spells (and others, including summoning a meteor shower) are quite gratifying.

It's too bad the huge and detailed environments in Bullet Witch, including accurately modeled suburban neighborhoods, are linear. That is, you're given the impression you can go anywhere and do anything -- as in Grand Theft Auto -- but you soon realize you're on a short leash and must follow a specific path.

Another problem with the game is that it can be cumbersome to control Alicia's movement with the Xbox 360's left analog stick while moving the camera with the right analog stick. It's like having to play actor and director at the same time, which might work for some games (usually when the camera is somewhat automated, but lets you swivel it around for a better view) but not when both are continuously mandatory, as in Bullet Witch.

This single-player adventure has its strengths -- namely, big and attractive outdoor environments and impressive spell-casting effects -- but the dumb artificial intelligence, repetitive gun battles, and awkward controls bring the game down to a C-grade experience. And at only six or seven hours of play, you can easily tackle this single-player shooter in a weekend.

Better Xbox 360 action/adventure games include Microsoft Game Studios' Crackdown and Capcom's Lost Planet: Extreme Condition. A more appropriate title for kids is LEGO Star Wars II: The Original Trilogy.

Reviewed: 06/06/2007

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Content
CS adults kids

Sexual Content

A scantily clad heroine, but no nudity.

Violence

Graphic violence and gore around every corner as you blast away demons into bits. As you reduce them to piles of mush, you will often see blood spurting out in all directions.

Language

"Oh s--t," and a few references to "damn" ("Damn, this is so stupid," "Damn you and your power," and "You're all a bunch of damn traitors!").

Message

 

Social Behavior

 

Commercialism

 

Drug/Alcohol/Tobacco

 

Educational Value

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