| Consumer Advice |
ESRB Rating: Everyone
Battle hardened cynical gamers not in touch with their sensitive side beware. You won't find any killing, decapitating or blood letting here. What you do get is vibrant child-happy colors, excruciatingly cute cartoon characters and some seriously funny rapping to go along with the surreal story. You've never encountered anything quite like this before. Girl gamers should fall instantly in love with Parappa and his puppy love antics while children should be able to handle the simplistic yet meaningful controls with no problem. What about the rest of us twenty something and up so-called mature male gamers? Either pull down your shades or justify playing it with your girlfriend by you side. Truly a game for all ages and while its short in length, its long on originality. |
As the PlayStation library becomes more and more cluttered with derivative software, I found it increasingly
difficult to distinguish the good games from the bad ones. Lucky for Sony that there are still a few diamonds in the
rough and a game like PaRappa The Rapper has no trouble separating itself from the pack. This game stands out
in the best kinds of ways.
Visually, PaRappa is something to behold. The overall feel and art direction looks like something out of five year old's
coloring book. Bucking all kind of trendy 3D flash-in-the-pants graphics, PaRappa is decisively two-dimensional in the
most cartoon hilarious ways! The actual character designs of Parappa and his friends are all designed in a children's
book style only previously seen in a game like Yoshi's Island for the SNES. To top it off, the story, progressed though
wonderfully thoughtful full-motion video sequences,
about Parappa (a dog) trying to win the love of Sunny Funny (a
flower) by rapping is simply too funny and wacky to comprehend; a kind of must see it, to believe it mentality.
PaRappa's concept based on rap, plays something like a cross between Simon-Says and Tekken-style 10-hit combos in a music
video. While this may sound simple, it no where near demonstrates the depth of the game. Players must match rap lyrics
by pressing buttons with split second accuracy and even daring players further by free-styling which is creatively
remixing the lyrics to form new beats. The game covers a wide variety of raps and rather than promoting a stereotype,
PaRappa excels in its most important characteristic, its music with creative old school lyrics with lots of fun and plenty
of laughs. Each rap ends up close to being a sort of mini-tribute to each style. In fact, the music is so good and
catchy, I found myself rapping the lyrics of PaRappa at the most inappropriate times outside of playing the game.
Overall, the game is short and is easy to beat, but this is another example of how games shouldn't be judged by the
length of the game, but the quality of the experience. The magic of PaRappa will not be easily cloned and we'll probably
only get one like it in our lifetime. Sure to transcend cultural differences, PaRappa is special; plain and simple.
- Published February 11, 1998
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