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Xbox : Family Guy Reviews

Gas Gauge: 52
Gas Gauge 52
Below are user reviews of Family Guy 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 Family Guy. 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.

Summary of Review Scores
0's10's20's30's40's50's60's70's80's90's


ReviewsScore
Game Spot 64
Game FAQs
GamesRadar 40
CVG 60
IGN 41
GameSpy 40
GameZone 63
Game Revolution 45
1UP 70






User Reviews (1 - 11 of 11)

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Family Guy

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 0 / 2
Date: January 14, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Game is ok. Nice to see some of our favorite cartoon characters on a video game.

If you like family guy, you will like this game.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 2
Date: May 06, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Great game, delivered on time.

Family Rocks and so does the game! =)

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 1 / 2
Date: June 01, 2007
Author: Amazon User

This is the best game! if u like family u frikin love this so much!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Fun To Play, But Frustrasting Game Design

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 1 / 1
Date: November 11, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Fans of the television show will get a kick out of what amounts to an extra full bonus episode of Family Guy, with voices by some actual cast members and cool animation, great jokes and sight gags, and some of those random, non-sequitirs that the show is known for. I do feel that the game is fun enough to recommend, but ONLY if you can find the game for $5.00 (five dollars) or less. Otherwise, you're better off putting that money towards DVDs of the show itself. The problem is that because of the strange thought process the game's designers put into it, you may quickly grow too frustrated to care about getting to the end, to see all of the parts of the bonus episode. (You do get to see segments as you complete pairs of levels, but that's pretty much the only reward for completing the game...) My version is on the original XBox gaming system.

The premise of the game is okay, if not slightly disappointing that while you see many of the show's characters, most don't speak, and you only can play as three of them... But on the bright side, those three are Peter, Stewie, and Brian. You don't get to choose when, but you get to play as all three, as the game is laid out where the levels alternate with a different character. All of Stewie's levels are intellectually based involving strategy, ray guns, minor puzzles, Peter's levels are fun fighting/brawlfests, and Brian's are all stealth missions, where you have to hide and sneak around. While Peter's and Stewie missions are a blast, the problem is that Brian's levels are the hardest and not remotely as fun as Peter's or Stewie's to warrant being that difficult. Peter and Stewie's levels are the type you hope will never end and they feel like they go by too soon, whereas Brian's levels feel like a punishment, or a deep level of purgatory. And this is where the trouble with the game really becomes transparent.

If you get stuck and/or bored with one of Brian's levels (which 9 out of 10 of you are sure to do), you're out of luck, as you'll need to complete his level before you can go back to a Peter or Stewie level. If you die, even when you've collected most of what Brian has to collect, you still have to start the level again and do the same exact things over and over again. Unlike Peter and Stewie's levels where you can move in many different directions to accomplish the mission of the level, Brian's levels pretty much require you to follow the same path you've done already, if you have to restart that level. So unless you have a severe case of OCD, or are a major fan of masochism, this repetition may leave you wanting to turn off the game; never to return.

This also leads to the second major problem: There are no game save features and no multi-player options, not even the ability to create different player profiles so that friends or family can try without messing up your progress. This is completely ridiculous for a game based on a show with such a strong, religious fanbase. No more than one player at a time?!? On the surface, this seems not to be a big deal... until you play the game and get locked into Brian Purgatory. Say you have enough of that nonsense, decide to take a break, turn off the game and return, when you come back, the game WILL remember where you left off, BUT if you or anyone else should start up a NEW game before you've beat the game... your previous game and all the headaches you went through will be WRITTEN OVER, ERASED, GONE FOR GOOD. Otherwise, if like me, you have more than one Family Guy fanatic in the house... you either are going to have to take turns on levels with the same controller, or one of you is never going to get to play until the other one has finished every single level of the game.

I got about halfway through the game, in a couple of days, before I threw in the towel. I may take another crack at it, just because I really liked the Peter and Stewie levels, would love to see the whole episode, and would love to make it to the Peter vs. The Chicken level... but again, the Brian parts and the setup of this game are maddening. I would think that designers of a game based on a beloved Animated Fox show would have learned lessons from the even more frustrating Futurama video game that was released some years ago. Family Guy The Video Game could have been, as Peter would say, "Frickin' Sweet!," but instead the game designers made some really poor, lazy choices in basic game design that make it difficult even for a die-hard Family Guy fan like myself to laugh more than curse the screen. This is a game that had the potential to be enjoyed by groups or pairs of people at one time, but instead, they've made it frustrating for even one person to get through.

Let's hope another, improved Family Guy game is released. But unless that happens, it's not a good idea to spend more than a few dollars on this one, because let's face it... even if you make it through to the end... you're not likely to want to play it again and again, nor will people watching you play be likely to want to give it a try.

Worst Game Ever

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 2 / 4
Date: December 14, 2006
Author: Amazon User

This game is awful. Terrible graphics, Boring gameplay and 4 catch phrases per scene that are repeated over and over until your ears bleed.

Not as good as the show

1 Rating: 1, Useful: 2 / 4
Date: December 21, 2006
Author: Amazon User

All the game tries to do is make the same jokes the show has and put a littel game play in the middel

Family Guy Game Is Fabulous

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 2 / 3
Date: January 10, 2007
Author: Amazon User

This game is funny and loads of fun! Just like the series, it's packed full of silly antics by the characters. It's a little gross and naughty, but not over the top gross or naughty. It's definitely worth buying!

Not worth the cost

3 Rating: 3, Useful: 2 / 2
Date: January 18, 2007
Author: Amazon User

This game may be some what entertaining, but Brian's parts are really hard to get past unless you look them up on the internet. I beat this game in five days, and you don't get anything special once you beat it. You would be better off renting this game than paying $30 for something you will only play for a week.

Remember the time I played that really bad video game?

2 Rating: 2, Useful: 7 / 11
Date: November 01, 2006
Author: Amazon User

Family Guy is a show that needs no introduction. Seth Macfarlane's cartoon comedy is a phenomenon that has become a pop culture icon in recent years, especially with the show's revival on Fox. Like any popular brand, the show's been transformed into a video game. High Voltage Software and 2K Games have created a game that captures the essence of the show but forces a little bit of its humor into some very unimpressive gameplay experiences, ultimately resulting in a game that stands as a better collector's item than anything else. As a huge fan of the series, this is extremely disappointing to me.

Family Guy: Video Game! throws you into a long, drawn-out series of episodes from the show. You'll recognize the PTV episode, the one where Stewie shrinks and goes inside Peter's body, the one where Peter goes to Cheesie Charlie's, and more. You'll play as three of Macfarlane's crazy characters, and all three of them are voiced by Macfarlane himself. You'll sneak around avoiding capture and peeing on things as Brian the dog. You'll zap pesky nurses and infiltrate the inside of Peter's body as Stewie. As Peter, you'll fight against armies of children, old people, and annoying mimes.

All three of the characters have a different genre attached to their experience. Stewie's missions follow a basic action-platform style quite similar to Ratchet & Clank. Brian's missions are a throwback to pattern-based stealth games. Lastly, Peter's missions resemble any 2D side-scrolling action game from the early 90's, like Final Fight and even River City Ransom. Unfortunately, none of the three genres that are used here are pulled off well. Stewie's missions are annoying because they constantly have you firing your gun at idiotic characters and jumping around with a terrible feeling of perspective. Peter's are repetitive to a point of being awful, and Brian's are by far the worst. His pattern-based stealth missions require an immense amount of patience while you wait for annoying NPCs to walk a certain distance, allowing you to proceed. None of the different adventures are inventive in any way, it almost feels like High Voltage Software created a game with the Simpsons Arcade Game, Metal Gear, and Ratchet & Clank engines and did nothing to change the fundamentals or build on them.

The out-of-place, random events that Family Guy is known (and, by South Park, harassed) for are terribly represented in the game. It's always at the same basic spot when a character stops and says a certain line, "This is kind of like the time I...," and the scene is initiated. Each event is played out in a random and arbitrary mini-game, and none of the minis feel like they were made with effort. While they're one of the funniest parts of the show, they're one of the least memorable with the game.

It's sad that Family Guy: Video Game! plays so badly, because everything else about the game excels. The crass humor from the show is completely intact, and fans of the show like myself that have every episode memorized will spot every in-joke and remark made by the excellently-voiced cast. Seriously, everything's here-from popular and widely-known jokes like the monkey in Chris's closet to the obscure stuff, like Meg's birthday present of a horse that was forgotten about and left to turn into a skeleton in Peter's closet. Supporting characters like Quagmire and Cleveland make an appearance and I will admit to laughing out loud when I saw Joe Swanson's desk at the precinct. I won't ruin too much of the game's clever humor that wasn't present in the show, but playing the game and getting through the awful gameplay just to see and hear some of the stuff here is quite a lot to ask.

Visually, Family Guy: Video Game! is appropriate and I wouldn't have asked for it to be created in any other way. It's done with cel-shading techniques that cast the characters in colorful, inky 3D and the environments in a rather basic but fitting 2D style. The visual effects aren't very impressive and the animation is, well, pretty awful. While running around with Stewie, it actually appears that the only parts on his body that move are his arms and legs. His head and body remain mostly immobile. Another technical issue that bugged me was the ever-present music; it's terrible and takes away from the otherwise perfect audio element of Family Guy: Video Game!.

Overall, Family Guy: Video Game! is a bad gameplay experience, and it's unfortunate, really, because one of television's best series is so awfully represented in a virtual form. High Voltage Software should be ashamed of the lack of gameplay quality but 2K Games should be happy that Family Guy fans will probably invest time into the game anyway, simply because of the source material. It's a game that could easily be beaten in a sitting or two, so don't invest the money unless you plan on keeping the game as a collector's item or hating it like the entire family hates Meg.

Damn you Belvedere!!!!

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 10 / 12
Date: October 21, 2006
Author: Amazon User

When I first saw that this was on sale I had to have it.
I am pleased over all. The voices are all there, the action is fun, my only complaint is that the Brian levels are all sneaking around and if you don't get it right you end up in re-play hell. The mini games are pretty entertaining, many of them are easy to fail because you are too busy laughing to figure out what to do. Once you get a hang of it they are really fun. The game did get just a little repetitive towards the end but over all I liked it. I do suggest this game even if it is kind of short its a lot of fun.

Not much on re-play value, you get to play the mini games but I would have liked a few more extras, maybe a fighting game like the one they had on line.

If your not a fan or don't know the show too well then rent it.
It is worth Checking out.


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