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Dreamcast : Gauntlet Legends Reviews

Gas Gauge: 63
Gas Gauge 63
Below are user reviews of Gauntlet Legends 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 Gauntlet Legends. 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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Game Spot 42
Game FAQs
IGN 84






User Reviews (1 - 11 of 20)

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Total garbage

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 2 / 14
Date: June 28, 2000
Author: Amazon User

That's what this game is. I've been a hardcore gamer since I was 5 and I've learned to appreciate a good game even if it first appears bad. I gave a fair shot at this game, but it is way too simple to be any fun. Their is no way to customize your character - armor, weapon, etc. The enemies are all the same and by the way I sold it a week after i bought it

Mindless entertainment

2 Rating: 2, Useful: 2 / 7
Date: July 21, 2000
Author: Amazon User

If you're idea of fun is holding down the attack button and simply obliterating everything around you indescriminately, then you'll love gauntlet legends. Honestly, it quite simply is mindless. The graphics are great, and if you liked the original, you'll be nostalgic. However, there really isn't anything to challenge your gaming ability. Typically, bosses in this sort of game are tough and you need to learn strategies to beat them. I do not jest in the least when I say that I beat every single boss (including the final one) by holding down the attack button and standing in front of it. It's just that easy. There are 8 characters and 4 hidden ones. However, it's the same game over and over, no randomization, nothing really tailored to different characters. After winning the game, doing it again with another character is as much fun as painting your house, letting it dry, painting it again, letting it dry and then painting it again. Gets old pretty darn quick.

Not recommended!

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 0 / 1
Date: November 13, 2000
Author: Amazon User

I boughty Gaunlet Legends a few months back when my friends were coming over. I played it for about a week and haven't played it since. The game's sounds and graphics are not bad, but the game gets extremely boring after a while. Even in multiplayer it is the same old thing again and again, the bad guys keep coming and coming. The worlds you can explore are dark and shabby.

The only good point about this game is that it is one of the few multiplayer games which allows two people to explore a world at the same time. Furthermore the game does not really harness any of the features the Dreamcast was designed for.

I would not recommend buying this game.

ok game

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 0 / 8
Date: June 20, 2001
Author: Amazon User

This game is alright. Its sortof borring because all you do is shoot people arcade style. It has poor graghics, when your playing with your friend you can't even tell who's who if your the same color. All in all this game is ok.

Great multi player game...disturbing story line

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: January 29, 2004
Author: Amazon User

Gauntlet Legends is a great multi player game if you have the friends. It does get boring as a single player, fast. The graphics are less than spectacular (as with ALL Midway Dreamcast games), but the sound is passable. The game has a disturbing story line which is kind of a turn off and if not for that it would be a great game.

Worth getting if you play it as a multi player, if not then you can let it slip under the radar

Very fun as a multi-player!

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: August 25, 2005
Author: Amazon User

The stroy-line isn't very good, but It is a great game for people who like to kill evil beasts or if you have lot's of people in the house!

A great multi-player game for sure!

Just don't buy it unless you like LOTS of killing and/or multi-player games!

It DOES take up loads of memory space, though...

A Legend, NOT!

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 1 / 5
Date: January 09, 2001
Author: Amazon User

It's a shooter, you run around through a maze shooting. You find occasional powerups, and you shoot. You go into different levels and worlds and shoot. Not much skill involved. All you need is 2 thumbs/controller/half a brain and shoot! I guess shooters are just not my BAG! Graphics and gameplay are good. Didn't play it long enough to actually find the plot (2 weeks or so, surprised even that long) Shooters just isn't my favorite genre, and my review may in someway be biased. If your into shooters, then its your call, but as for my personal opinion, this game is ok. Maybe a little fun with multiplayers, but replay value=( Try to find it used, or wait for the price to go down. This game get's 3 stars: Grade: C. Gamer247 is OUT! GAME ON!

Flash back

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: September 15, 2000
Author: Amazon User

A re-make of the 80's arcade classic, Gauntlet Legends lets many of us relive our youth, with the days we spent pouring our hard earned allowance into a machine at the local arcade. Gauntlet Legends contains mostly monotonous hack and slash game play. It consists of little more then mashing the attack button and collecting gold. At first the graphics might catch your eye, and the chance to relive the days of old, but soon after you will tire of this game. It is a renter at best which is always better played with a friend then solo.

A great arcade conversion, but not without its flaws

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 31 / 32
Date: June 23, 2000
Author: Amazon User

To cover the most basic point first: This is a near-perfect conversion of the Gauntlet Legends arcade games (more so than the Playstation and Nintendo 64 versions, which made a few modifications to the gameplay, particularly in the item system). If you haven't played the arcade version, find it and play it before buying the home version. If you find the arcade game exciting and interesting, then you'll probably love the home version as well (and it's a lot cheaper than shoveling in all the quarters to build a character to level 99 in the arcade!) If you find the arcade game boring and repetitive, then the home version will do nothing to change your opinion.

That being said, here are the notable differences between the Dreamcast version and the arcade: First, and perhaps most importantly, Midway has generously included all four of the new characters from the arcade sequel, Gauntlet Dark Legacy. These characters (particularly the Jester) have a quite different feel from the original four, which extends replay value. However, the "alter ego" versions of these characters--the special, animal versions you can select in the arcade after reaching a certain level--aren't included here; for that, you'll have to wait for Dark Legacy to come out on Playstation 2. (The alter ego versions of the original four Legends characters are present, though you have to reach level 25 to unlock them.)

Unlike the arcade, your character's health doesn't continuously count down; this takes a bit of tension out of the game. On the other paw, if you're killed before completing a level, you can't simply "insert coin to continue"; you have to restart the level, and you lose any experience you gained during the level. So it still pays to be careful. (If you find yourself too low on health to complete the harder levels, try just playing through the very first level a few times first; it's filled with food that will raise your health in a hurry.)

Another important difference: Just like in the arcade, many of the home version's levels are quite complex to solve, and rely on finding several hidden features in the level. In the arcade, if you find yourself stumped, you can simply stand still, and before long a 'magic arrow' will appear to at least point you in the right direction to proceed. No such luck in the home version; you're on your own. This certainly makes the game more challenging, but can also be frustrating, especially for new players.

As with a number of other Midway games for the Dreamcast, the user interface outside of the game itself does leave much to be desired. For example, there's no auto-save option; if you forget to save your character's progress before you turn off the system, you lose it all. For multi-player games, each character has to be loaded and saved separately. When you load a character, rather than showing you the saved characters' initials or other identifying info, you're simply shown a series of meaningless filenames ("GAUNTLET.001", "GAUNTLET.002", etc.); if you have more than one character saved to a single VMU, it's up to you to remember which file contains each character. (And be _very_ careful when saving your character; you can easily overwrite one of your other characters if you accidentally pick the wrong filename for the save!)

Despite these problems, though, Gauntlet Legends is still an extremely worthwhile purchase for anyone who enjoys the arcade game.

Fun, but brief

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 9 / 11
Date: July 31, 2000
Author: Amazon User

Gauntlet Legends is yet another game for the Dreamcast that proves a lot of fun for a while, but ends up growing boring after a while.

Don't get me wrong, because it's a highly entertaining game for a while, and a wonderful example of how to do a party game. I played it at a friend's house and even the people who were least into video games (who never played them except for this instance) had lots of fun.

Also, if you're expecting anything approaching an RPG, this really isn't the game for you. I personally have a background of mudding on hack-n-slash CircleMUDs, and so I found the game format very natural, but people who are looking for more storyline elements and character development are going to be disappointed, as in the end this game is about killing monsters and getting gold. There are some okay puzzle elements to the game, but the system is fairly limited.

One other tangential point to this game is that it has a _very_ good soundtrack. As the levels get higher, the music gets better. In particular, the music for the secret level Mausoleum (at the end of the Castle Treasury level) is stellar.

In short, this is game provides for a lot of fun, and can be fun for quite a while if you're looking for a mindless timewaster (which certainly has its place), but for actually wanting challenges and real goals, the game ends up falling off a bit too soon. If you have friends to play with you, I highly recommend buying it, but otherwise, I'd try it out first.


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