Below are user reviews of Namco Museum Vol. 4 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 Namco Museum Vol. 4.
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.
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User Reviews (1 - 6 of 6)
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Too much expectation...
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 2 / 2
Date: September 17, 2005
Author: Amazon User
I'm writing this as one of the old timers who actually played most of these in the arcades. This disc is good for those wishing to relive the old days of the arcade. The only things missing are the loud pings and crashes of the other machines and the local rock station over the radio.
I don't believe people give this compilation a fair shake. They are SO use to Playstation, Xbox, Etc., that they forget when these games were released. Games like Pac-Man (an oldie but goodie) doesn't need a lot of memory. But people overlook a game like The Genji and the Heike Clans. When this came out, it was breaking new ground for side-scrolling fight games. It looks hokey...Because it's OLD. It's not gonna look like Metal Gear Solid.
Yeah the games might be harder to control...on the Playstation. These games were made for an arcade Joystick. The controls don't translate well to the Playstation for whatever reason. Other than that, I've enjoyed the flawless recreations of these old games.
not as good as m
3
Rating: 3,
Useful: 0 / 0
Date: September 12, 2003
Author: Amazon User
man that Pac-Land game is fun at parties you get a bunch of stupid college kids together and those magic boots that make pac-man fly acroos the screen are the coolest things on the face of this earth this game wasn't all that great other then pac-land which wasn't all that great but it is worth while to have
Fourth time is a charm?
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 1 / 1
Date: January 17, 2002
Author: Amazon User
I see a lot to talk about for this one. Pac-Land is based on the old TV cartoon; this side-scroller gives Pac-Man a body and you guide him through "Fairy Land" avoiding ghosts [some in hovercrafts, airplanes, and pogo sticks!] and collecting fruits, in various landscapes (ex.--town, peaks & valleys, desert, poolside, brick house, forest, waterspout). Try to find the blue cap (usually at the start of each Trip), the secret "invisibility" cactus/hydrant (usually at the 3rd of each Trip), the 7650 point bonus balloon (in the 4th stage of each Trip) and the Galaxian bird, also worth 7650 points (appears at random). And of course the energizers to turn the tables on those ghosts; depending on how many are on the screen, each blue ghost is worth from 200 to 7650 points in succession! Just about the only thing missing is Chomp-Chomp and Sourpuss; they appeared at the end of each Trip in the arcade game. The Genji and the Heike clans is based on an actual historical figure, and though it may scare some players off, is quite interesting. I think Assault qualifies as the first tank game set on a multi-layered planet in outer space...there are three different versions of Assault on this disc (if you look hard enough!). In Ordyne, you control Dr. Tomari, an inventor whose atomic converter and girlfriend were stolen, and you go after the culprit in an airplane (with a second player, Felix, at the same time if you wish) while fighting some weird-looking creatures. I didn't care much for the Return of Ishtar. If you go to the Theatre room in the Museum, you can hear PicPac, the robot band, play an instrumental song or two (with background "video" graphics!)...the same songs (with or without Japanese lyrics) can be played from the Music selector inside the Theatre room. Like the other discs, this one features history, pictures of game-based items, and classic NG magazine covers. There's also a built-in ranking system on each game if you use your memory card. Highly recommended for those who remember arcade life at its first peak. Enjoy thoroughly.
Nice to find an old game, Too hard to control.
2
Rating: 2,
Useful: 1 / 1
Date: September 23, 2001
Author: Amazon User
Back when I was about 6 or 7, I played the arcade version of Pac-Land. I bought this collection of 5 games, just to get the 1 game. I must say that I was disappointed. The controls for the game are terrible and it just makes it too hard to control. Where's the fun in a game if you can't control it?
Pac-Land memorable, but the rest is not
3
Rating: 3,
Useful: 3 / 3
Date: July 19, 2001
Author: Amazon User
This is the fourth in the series of Namco recreations of Arcade classics. It includes: Assault, Pac-Land, Ordyne, The Return of Ishtar, and The Genji and The Heike Clans. Assault is one of the better ones - it puts you at the controls of a 3-D tank fighting other tanks. Pac-Land is a memorable side-scrolling world that most Pac-Man fans will remember, but the rest of the world forgot. The rest of this collection consists of (at best) second rate arcade conversions that have no business being called "Classics". Only worth buying for Pac-Man and Play Station completists.
awful-not even close to being worth the sky-high price tag
4
Rating: 4,
Useful: 9 / 9
Date: November 14, 1999
Author: Amazon User
This and Namco museum Vol.5 absolutely scrape the bottom of the barrell-these games are pitifully lame are an assault of sheer boredom to play. The only aspect of this title anyone might enjoy is Pac-Land, which is a side scroller starring Pac Man (actually released before Super Mario Bros!) that resembles the Pac Man cartoon show of yore. So if you are a Pac Man fanatic and must have every game the lil yellow guy appears in, try to pick this up used. Otherwise, stay the heck away from this stinker.
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