Fairytale Fights

Summary

Fairytale Fights is a hack and slash action-adventure game developed by Playlogic Game Factory and published by Playlogic Entertainment for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360.

Fairytale Fights
PlayStation 3 cover of Fairytale Fights
Developer(s)Playlogic Game Factory[a]
Publisher(s)Playlogic Entertainment
Director(s)Olivier Lhermite
Producer(s)Elke Herinckx
Designer(s)
  • Tj'ièn Twijnstra
  • Rogério Silva
Programmer(s)
  • Erik Bastianen
  • Marcel Meulemans
Artist(s)
  • André van Rooijen
  • Robin Keijzer
  • Gerrit Willemse
  • Jeroen Backx
  • Peter van Dranen
  • André van Rooijen
Writer(s)
  • Robin Keijzer
  • Paul van der Meer
Composer(s)
  • Pedro Macedo Camacho
  • Jonathan van den Wijngaarden
EngineUnreal Engine 3
Platform(s)PlayStation 3, Xbox 360
Release
  • NA: October 27, 2009
Genre(s)Hack-and-slash, action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Fairytale Fights allow the player a chance to reclaim the fairytale status of Little Red Riding Hood, Snow White, Jack, The Naked Emperor and more.

Gameplay edit

Fairytale Fights is based on the Unreal Engine 3. The game has a volumetric liquid system, where blood drenches the surroundings when the player slice up the enemies multiple times in a frenzied attack. They are also able to slide through the pools of blood and melt their enemies using acid potions. Players have full control over how and when to slice their enemies, called dynamic slicing technology. The game features a multiplayer system for online and offline play, with drop-in-drop-out gameplay. Fairytale Fights features 140 weapons, and 3 difficulty levels.[1]

Reception edit

Fairytale Fights received mixed reviews, with a 51% average score on the Xbox 360 format on Metacritic. Some critics were more positive about it, such as Games Master magazine in the UK, which called it "a likeable, if slight, slice of gory Brothers Grimm gaming". However, many sources were considerably more scathing. IT Reviews said that "the dodgy controls combined with some awkward camera viewpoints, plus the overly repetitive levels, slowly sap much of the joy from the experience".[2] GameSpot went further, criticising the game's lack of pacing, lousy boss fights and "shallow, repetitive combat".[3]

A considerable number of glitches marred the Xbox 360 release in particular, leading to less than positive reviews before the much delayed patch was eventually released.[4] Until the game was patched, several achievements were unobtainable and multiplayer was severely affected, something which has now been remedied.

Andy Eddy of Team Xbox also added that Fairytale Fights's "annoyingly bad game design" held it back from being a better game. Eddy went on to say "Sadly, [Fairytale Fights] gimmicks aren’t strong enough to maintain the game across its entirety."

Awards edit

 
Dutch Games Awards 2010 Best Audio Design Award won by Pedro Macedo Camacho for his work on Fairytale Fights with Jonathan van den Wijngaarden

Despite the mixed reviews across the web, Fairytale Fights won 2 Dutch Game Awards out of its 3 nominations during the 2010 Control Industry Award ceremony. Fairytale Fights was nominated for Best Audio Design, Best Visual Design and Best Console game of 2009–2010, taking home both the awards for Best Audio Design and Best Visual Design.

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Additional development by Abstraction Games, Geniusprogrammer.net and Hydravision Entertainment

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ "Fairytale Fights First Impressions". Gaming Union. August 26, 2009. Archived from the original on August 28, 2009. Retrieved 2009-08-26.
  2. ^ http://www.itreviews.co.uk/games/g642.htm Archived 2011-06-11 at the Wayback Machine IT Reviews
  3. ^ http://uk.gamespot.com/xbox360/action/fairytalefights/review.html Archived 2009-11-22 at the Wayback Machine GameSpot
  4. ^ http://www.gaminglives.com/2009/12/28/fairytale-fights/ GamingLives Review - Fairytale Fights