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Guides


Nintendo 64 : Tarzan Reviews

Below are user reviews of Tarzan and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Tarzan. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.







User Reviews (1 - 7 of 7)

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Tarzan for Nintendo 64

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 14 / 14
Date: March 06, 2000
Author: Amazon User

Good for kids 5 years and older. I rented this from Block Buster video for a 5 year old boy. He loved this game. I wanted to try the game before I buy. Now I will buy this game.

nothing but fun

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 20 / 20
Date: March 24, 2000
Author: Amazon User

We rented a lot of video games before buying Tarzan. We bought it because it was the first video game that we found was fun and easy to play for a 4 years old. It has different levels and each one is a lot of fun. After all the videos we rented, we can say that Tarzan is definitely worth the money.

3 1/2 stars, suprisingly fun

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 5 / 5
Date: August 24, 2000
Author: Amazon User

When I couldn't find any thing to rent at the video store practicly besides this, I wasn't too happy. It plays a lot like yoshi's story, except there are a few running levels and 3-D ones. The graphics are average at best, but, it's not like they're impossible to see. It's very challenging for a disney game, especially some of the boss fights. Even if you have doubts about it, you should defenatley give it a try. This is a good game, but, I'd suggest renting it first...

great game for beginners

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 21 / 21
Date: November 03, 2000
Author: Amazon User

So many of the reviews you read on games are by "expert" gamers. Sometimes the very things they complain about are the things we love. This is one game that Mom, Dad, 12 year old, 7 year old and 4 year old can all play at their own level. We watch each other play and give each other tips. The scenery and music are straight out of the movie. My four year old actually went around telling people he was Tarzan. As a Mom this is just the sort of game I am looking for for my kids.

The best game ever!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 6 / 8
Date: April 07, 2001
Author: Amazon User

I played this game at my friend's house. I was very good at it but still needed more practice. That's when I got it. The first couple of levels are there just so you can learn how to play. If you've seen the movie, you'll know who Terk is. While you are playing the forst couple of levels, the are little Terk "heads". If you jump up and touch them, Terk will come out and teach you how to do somthing. For example, in one level he teaches you how to swing on vines. After that things get a little trickier. In one of the levels, you have a stampede of elephants chasing after you. Terk doesn't show up in that one, so it's kind of hard. I myself have never finished the game. But even though it is a little frustrating when you lose, (somtimes) it's still fun.

Tarzan

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 7 / 10
Date: October 21, 2001
Author: Amazon User

Several months after Sony shipped Tarzan for the PlayStation, Activision released the same game to Nintendo 64 owners, perhaps in an attempt to satisfy those N64 fans who might have heard that the earlier Disney animated-film-to-game translation actually fared quite well. In both versions, gameplay is fun, diverse, and not just a cross-media no-brainier licensing affair. However, the N64 game does fall short of the previous version, in a couple of areas that do not necessarily impair the overall quality of the game. But first, on to the details. The single-player platform game follows the recently released animated film's plot exactly, and that's a very good thing, as the movie's pacing is conducive to the challenges you expect from a video game. Actually, what Tarzan captures, surprisingly, is the simplicity (with challenge) found in classic games. You play as Tarzan most of the time, first as the young ape-man in training and then later as the perpetually "prime of life" Tarzan. When you're not playing as Tarzan, you're running through the jungle as Jane, in a Victorian dress, attempting to flee a pack of baboons, or you're tearing up the campsite as Terk, Tarzan's she-ape companion. There are 14 levels in all, and, surprisingly, each level and the objective therein is strikingly different from one another. Sure, there are conventions that reoccur in some levels, such as swinging on vines or sliding along fallen trees. However, these consistent features contribute to your overall grasp of the gameplay and become more demanding as you proceed (yes, demanding, on anything other than the "easy" setting, which is insanely novice, yet good for beginning gamers, no doubt). About half the levels are composed of standard 2D platform jumping, while you grab items and avoid animals until you reach the end. The rest of the levels take advantage of action scenes in the movie. In the Stampede level, for example, you control Tarzan as he runs ahead of a pack of elephants Crash Bandicoot- or Herc's Adventures-style. You move from side to side and jump when necessary. This parallels the stampede scene in the movie. In the SaborAttacks level, you fight the leopard, Sabor, with a spear and with tricky jumping moves a number of times until you conquer him, just as in the film. The aforementioned event with Jane is the Baboon Chase level, which follows the movie so closely that it has Tarzan swinging in to save you, hence navigating the chase at that point. Bonus levels exist as well. To earn one, you must collect four pieces of Jane's baboon drawings scattered around the environment. If you do so, you'll glide down a stream on a raft, grabbing tokens and fruits until the timer runs out, or you'll ride through the jungle on a stork, doing the same, or you'll slide along the fallen trees in the style of Crystal Dynamics' Pandemonium, ducking limbs and jumping over others. What's the point of tokens and fruit? It's all pretty intuitive. The tokens, in lots of 100, give you an extra life, and the fruits (yellow, purple, red, and blue of varying strengths and availability), are for you to lob at animals that get in your way. You'll also pick up other objects, such as a stone blade, to use against close-range predators. Bananas are used to increase your health meter and are pretty readily available throughout the game. If you collect all the letters in Tarzan's name (also scattered throughout each level), you open up movies that move the game forward. Worthy of mentioning, too, is the fact that you can go back and replay saved levels, should you want to find all the tokens, drawing pieces, or letters to gain extra lives (necessary for some of the later levels) or acquire a better ending score. One problem with the N64 Tarzan is that the controls aren't the greatest. The PlayStation version was moderately plagued by similar shortcomings, yet the N64 stick does not respond well to climbing, swinging, or fighting tigers. In fact, the analog offers entirely too much freedom - a feature that Tarzan gameplay doesn't require. Stick with the D-pad or nothing, for the most part, through most of this game. You'll usually deal with the animals (sometimes your enemies, sometimes there to give you a lift) immediately, but if you don't, you'll discover fairly quickly that the AI isn't too swift. In most cases, the animals are predictable and can be dispelled with fruit bombs or avoided altogether with little effort - with the exception of the evil, evil birds. We also noticed that the collision is occasionally laughable. Several times we managed to use our knife, which is more of a handheld stone blade, to dispose of pesky animals without even making contact with them. But this wasn't a repeated offense, so it's forgivable, considering the game's strong points. In the sensory areas, Tarzan doesn't really look too fantastic on the N64. The PlayStation version (all hail the disc!) offers animated cutscenes from the movie to progress the plot along, while the N64 version tosses you into the gameplay, so as a result the N64 game doesn't have the same degree of plot coherence. Some slowdown is apparent if too much action is happening on the screen, which can be annoying on levels such as the Baboon Chase, wherein you're trying to knock apes out of your way as you run from baboons and avoid other obstacles. In a word, consistency in speed is mandatory to get through such challenges successfully. Also, the N64 cart doesn't support the rich sound you expect. It's somewhat muddled-sounding. However, all in all, Tarzan on the N64 is a pleasant surprise that rises from its rough spots with a fair amount of success. While the game is not particularly mind-stumping or sophisticated, it is challenging and does require a good amount of skill, whether in jumping from place to place, knowing where hidden items might be, or fighting belligerent leopards who lunge a lot. Even if movie-license games turn you off, this game is an exception and worth taking a look at. If you can't stand Disney and have no interest in the franchise, this game is still worth looking at

Maybe less than 2 Stars

2 Rating: 2, Useful: 0 / 3
Date: August 05, 2002
Author: Amazon User

Tarzan for the N64 isn't as somebody may think. It is NOT 3-D. Only some levels are in 3-D and you most of the time use the Control Pad to move Tarzan around the place. It is kind of challenging, and if you have not a controller pak, and you lose at the final levels, trust me: You will be mad. So, if you REALLY are into Tarzan get this and a Controller Pak, but action-adventure gamers like me would pass on this. It is not worth it. Tarzan:Untamed for the Gamecube is way better than this, and it is cheaper, and even that does not meet an action-gamer's expectations, so pass on this. The graphics aren't too good, the sound isn't that great, the controls are pretty hard, it is boring, it's not in 3-D, and even Yoshi's Story is much funner than this.


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