Review: Resident Evil 4: Mobile Edition
For those of you experiencing your first few days in civilization, Resident Evil is a first/third-person zombie shooter franchise from Capcom that has infiltrated every form of media on the planet. It started as a kick-ass video game, back in 1996. Since then, Resident Evil has appeared in 20 games on 12 platforms (including “PC” and “Mobile Phone”). It has also spawned a variety of movies, comic books, and, yes, someone took the time to write novels about Resident Evil. The story has varied and evolved over time, but there is one running theme: humans killing zombies. OK, history class over. Now onto the review:
The first thing you’ll notice are the controls. As is becoming popular, on-screen buttons for the iPhone appear and disappear as needed. A joystick appears on the left-hand side and allows you to move around (there is no strafing). When you draw your weapon, you freeze and cannot move, and a red laser appears. You aim the laser with the joystick and shoot at will. Here’s the problem: aiming perfectly is damn near impossible; you simply don’t have the precision on the touch-screen to move the laser exactly where you want. When the enemy is more than 2 feet away (so, always), it is maddeningly difficult to aim. I eventually got used to it, but it took a really long time – and I have yet to perfect it. Given that head shots are far more valuable than body blows, you will surely miss the precision of better controls.
Again, it takes forever to get used to the controls, and this is the game’s Achilles’ heel. It is the reason why the levels can be so frustrating. Time and time again, especially early on, I would complete 50-75% of a level and then be unable to aim my laser at an enemy before he tore me to shreds. To top it off, there’s no auto-save, so I would have to start from scratch all over again. That said, the diversity and depth of the levels made me smile. Each is different, and has a unique setting. Your tasks change from level to level; sometimes you have to just walk towards the exit and stick a bullet in everyone on the way. Other times, you act as a sniper and try to take out the enemies as they attempt to grab your dear Ashley and take her into their lair. You’ll barely get through each level, even if you’ve got plenty of health and ammo. The strategy for each level also changes depending on the variety of guns you’ve got to choose from. You can only carry/buy so many, and your choices are integral to your success.
What we like:
- Awesome levels. Deep, challenging levels. Valiant enemies and rigorous fight scenes. This game was difficult enough to frustrate you, but just enough to keep you from growing any gray hairs.
- Variety. Resident Evil 4 is chalk-full of weapons and zombies: what else could you want?
- Engaging gameplay. Fight scenes are uniquely entertaining, and you’ll be hooked in no time.
What we don’t like:
- Control stick. This game has one critical flaw, and it is massive. Like a bloody pimple on a beautiful face, the poor controls stick out and make it difficult for even a Resident Evil lover like myself to whole-heartedly endorse the iPhone version.
- Auto-save. The joystick problem was magnified by the lack of checkpoint saving in this game. Personally, any game with longer levels ought to have auto-save built in.
- Menus. This is a bit nit-picky, but the menus take forever to go through. It took too many taps to get from one level to the next, or to select a new weapon, or to sell existing weapons, or… you get the point.