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Playstation : Tall Infinity Reviews

Below are user reviews of Tall Infinity 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 Tall Infinity. 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 - 1 of 1)

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Short on pure gaming value

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 3 / 5
Date: July 26, 2004
Author: Amazon User

While Tall: Unlimited (or Tall: Infinity, as it is otherwise titled) possesses decent graphics and original puzzle-solving elements, its gameplay is nevertheless a little too complex for all but the most intense gamers to appreciate. Theoretically, the purpose of the game is to create a multi-tiered tower within a set time limit, which is difficult enough to accomplish in and of itself. However, with additional rules to keep in mind, the process of accomplishing this task is far more frustrating than it is fun. For example, the tower's eighteen-block circumference must be full in order for the top story to be considered "complete." Similarly, there are so many strategies to use in respect to winning the game (e.g., rolling and re-rolling blocks over one another until their colors match up perfectly) that selecting the perfect maneuver proves itself to be little more than a chore. Receiving bonus points for building towers in as little time or as few steps as possible doesn't make matters much more enjoyable, either, and is apt to turn even the most carefree gamer into an utterly cantankerous perfectionist. Even if players pay little to no attention to the game's dull and monotonous music, boring stick-figure characters, and limited control and sound effects, the aforementioned flaws are enough to kill gamers' interest.

If PSX owners are looking for a good "supermarket-stand" or "bargain-bin" puzzle game by Agetec, they'd be better off searching for a copy of Star Sweep or Crossroad Crisis, both of which have gameplay that is easy to learn, though still difficult (though certainly not impossible) to master. One cannot say the same for the gaming elements of Tall: Unlimited, unfortunately, for despite how this title tries to cite its foundation upon such quality gaming, it simply does not stack up that way.


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