Namco Museum Virtual Arcade
Namco Museum Virtual Arcade
Namco Museum Virtual Arcade, développé par Namco Bandai America et publié par Bandai Namco Entertainment, est sorti sur Xbox 360 le 4 novembre 2008. Cette compilation réunit plusieurs genres tels que le jeu de tir, la course, l’arcade, la réflexion et la plateforme.
Le titre permet de retrouver d’anciens succès d’arcade de Namco comme Tower of Druaga, Galaga, Grobda, Mappy, Metro-Cross, Ms. Pac-Man, New Rally-X, Pac-Man Arrangement, Pole Position 2, Sky Kid et Xevious, parmi d’autres. Il intègre également Pac-Man Championship Edition, que de nombreuses publications vidéoludiques ont élu meilleur jeu téléchargeable de 2007, ainsi que Galaga Legions qui prolonge cet héritage par une refonte intelligente de la franchise restant fidèle à ses racines.
L’accueil critique et des joueurs s’est exprimé sous forme d’avis variés. GameSpot a ainsi écrit que « Namco Museum is an impressive collection of classics that spans the entire history of arcade gaming. » De son côté, Worth Playing a commenté : « Even with these menu and presentation issues, Namco Museum Virtual Arcade is definitely worth picking up at the current price for classics like Dragon Spirit, … ». Sur Metacritic, un joueur a indiqué : « I wish one day I would give this game to my cousins who have a Xbox one, I would play with them! », tandis qu’un autre a estimé : « What do you get when you put 25 classic Namco titles and 9 new ones and stick them all together on one disc? One of the best compilations you'll ever have the … ». Le jeu affiche un score agrégé de 69,50.
Médias
Avis des critiques et joueurs
Critiques de la Presse (Metacritic)
« Even with these menu and presentation issues, Namco Museum Virtual Arcade is definitely worth picking up at the current price for classics like Dragon Spirit, Galaga '88, Mappy, Super Pac-Man and a few others that are worth trying, in addition to the XBLA content. »
« Namco Museum is an impressive collection of classics that spans the entire history of arcade gaming. »
« I think Namco has covered their bases on this, their most complete collection of titles on one disc. »
« The bottom line is simple. If you are a fan of classic Namco games, there is no reason to not buy this disc. If you have not yet bought any of the games available on Xbox Live, this is the way to do it because you are getting more than your money worth. »
« Despite all this chafe in the wheat, Namco Museum Virtual Arcade is a pretty decent package for the price. »
« Though there's not much more to this release than the 25 classics and nine previously-available XBLA games, and the presentation isn't nearly as clean as it could be (likely because of technical requirements for the online play) there's a lot of fun to be had with these games, and with the XBLA games running five bucks a pop, this collection is a genuine bargain (if you like the XBLA games, that is.) »
« Namco Museum Virtual Arcade is an impressive release from Namco Bandai that could have been even better. »
« If you haven't yet downloaded Pac-Man C.E., Galaga Legions, Dig Dug or some of the other top-notch Namco XBLA offerings, Namco Museum Virtual Arcade is well worth the budget price tag. »
Avis des Joueurs (Metacritic)
« I wish one day I would give this game to my cousins who have a Xbox one, I would play with them! »
« What do you get when you put 25 classic Namco titles and 9 new ones and stick them all together on one disc? One of the best compilations you'll ever have the privilege of owning ofcourse! Namco Museum Virtual Arcade is Namco's most complete compilation release to-date, with 34 titles in all and many, many hours of fun just waiting to be had. A full list of titles on the disc is as follows: (the following is copied from jsharbour's review) Live Arcade Games (with achievements): Dig Dug Galaga Ms. Pac-Man New Rally-X Pac-Man Xevious Emulated Classics: Baraduke Bosconian Dig Dug II Dig Dug Arrangement Dragon Buster Dragon Spirit Galaga '88 Galaga Arrangement Galaxian Grobda King & Balloon Mappy Metro-Cross Pac & Pal Pac-Man Arrangement Pac-Mania Pole Position Pole Position II Rally-X Rolling Thunder Sky Kid Sky Kid Deluxe Super Pac-Man The Tower of Druaga »
« I'm a fan of retro games, even though I'm not very good at them. I enjoy it because I played these games in the arcade as a kid. But, this collection is CLUNKY. It's just not well done, feels thrown together without much thought put into it. The XBL games have achievements which is very cool, and the rest of the classic emulated games ran fine. But, loading times throughout are unacceptably slow. These ancient games are only about 256kb roms at most, so it's not like they have to stream content off the disc, they should come up immediately. I'm not impatient but by the time you wait for every game to load it's not easy to just jump in for a quick romp through a few old games--a-la popping in a quarter, like it should be. Why is it so slow? When I'm in the mood to play these games, I don't want it to be a small ordeal to get to playing. It's not convenient or pleasant, in other words. It's maybe a trite complaint but multiply it by 30 games and you have a frustration-inducing arcade experience--quite the opposite of what you want to feel when firing up ancient games for a little nostalgic fun. I was a little disappointed in the sluggishness of the emulated games, as well as the menus. There's obvious screen tearing in several games which hints at poor emulation running on the 360. The loading time for the menus and the disc startup is unacceptably slow. There is no title screen, just a menu to go to the XBL editions or the classic emulated versions. That's all there is for a title screen, so why does it take so long to load? I wouldn't think more than 2-3 seconds is needed. Also, after an XBLA game is finished, you're dumped back into your Games list, not Namco Museum, so you have to RUN IT ALL OVER AGAIN! I also had trouble getting the games to work well with my Street Fighter IV fightstick (which emulates the D-pad). Most games worked with it but responded poorly to the D-pad, as if the games are given priority control with the LS instead? I won't speculate, just disappointed that D-pad control is not very good. Dig Dug, for instance, is almost impossible to play with the stick, despite the fact that this and the other games were originally designed for exactly that kind of input. I won't fault the product for that, since it does not claim to support it, but basically that means D-pad input doesn't work very well. Why? I can guess that the delays in emulation have something to do with it, poor framerate, sluggish input. A casual player might not ever notice, but try playing with just the D-pad instead of LS. Since I'm so unhappy with it, I'm returning the game. I'll go back to Midway. If you enjoy just the Live Arcade remakes, then it's probably worth the purchase but the disc has to be inserted to play them! Live Arcade Games (with achievements): Dig Dug Galaga Ms. Pac-Man New Rally-X Pac-Man Xevious Emulated Classics: Baraduke Bosconian Dig Dug II Dig Dug Arrangement Dragon Buster Dragon Spirit Galaga '88 Galaga Arrangement Galaxian Grobda King & Balloon Mappy Metro-Cross Pac & Pal Pac-Man Arrangement Pac-Mania Pole Position Pole Position II Rally-X Rolling Thunder Sky Kid Sky Kid Deluxe Super Pac-Man The Tower of Druaga »