Metal Slug 3 PS2

Metal Slug 3 box art

Game Details

Platform: PS2
Released: 5 November 2004
Age Rating: 12
GTIN-13: 5060050940065
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Best Price: £0.00
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StoreStatusTotalBuy
GameStation£6.84
Gameseek£21.06
Play.com£9.79
Amazon.co.uk£19.99
GameStation£1.98

Description

Although Metal Slug 3 was born nearly five years ago, and was created exclusively for an even more exclusive console - the Neo Geo - news of its somewhat belated release on PAL home consoles met with a warm reception. SNK's Metal Slug series, throughout its six existing incarnations (Metal Slugs 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 & X) has a very simple appeal, enticing those with a penchant for retro styled gaming. It is an entirely 2D game, and as such, brings with it that purity of challenge. There are no puzzles to face, no branching routes to choose from, just plain old running left to right, firing off shots willy nilly and doing the occasional spot of jumping. Much like other traditional shoot 'em up platformers, notable examples being Contra and Gunstar Heroes, the joy is in the combination of an extremely simple premise, but with a relatively tight difficulty level, therefore providing a substantial and long-lasting challenge. In fact, many gamers will find Metal Slug 3's challenge almost too substantial. In this bizarre world, populated by everything from zombies to aliens and unusually aggressive crustaceans, the portrayal of mortality is surprisingly accurate...one shot kills. Bearing in mind that the later stages of the five levels see the screen absolutely smothered in projectiles - all heading straight for your bonce - you'll note that it is extremely difficult for the inexperienced. Assuming that you like the idea of a return to old school gameplay values, you will delight in what Metal Slug 3 has to offer. The character design and backdrops are superb, and although clearly very dated, thanks to their initial creation for the 16-bit Neo Geo, the way this game looks does make it stand out from the majority of more mainstream releases. Although this type of game was once a fairly generic standard, in this age of the 3D hack'n'slash it has reclaimed a certain air of originality. Indeed, the Metal Slug series has always been fairly innovative, at least for the genre it represents, and things like the simultaneo