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Gobs of Games

Score: 60%
ESRB: Everyone
Publisher: 3DO
Developer: 2n
Media: Cartridge/1
Players: 1 - 2
Genre: Puzzle/ Action/ Family

Graphics & Sound:

The graphics in Gobs of Games are passable, but barely so. The sparse game grids have nothing to them, and the Sokoban-style puzzle game consists of blocks and walls and empty space. The jungle-animal theme is there, but it feels very much tacked-on after the fact, and as such, doesn’t really add anything to the game. The whole thing feels dry and plain.

As for the sound, the music is definitely something to be turned off as soon as the game starts, and the sound effects are minimal at best. There’s nothing here to be particularly impressed by, but nothing too terribly atrocious, either. Basically, Gobs of Games gets by with the necessary minimum when it comes to presentation.


Gameplay:

It’s not all that much better when it comes to the games themselves, either. The single-player experience is either trivial or frustrating, and there’s really no point in playing these games by Game Link when you can just get out a piece of paper and play them by hand. Unlike Tetris, all of the ones available are easy to do without a game system.

Gobs of Games offers you a few different ‘groups’ of games to play. You can engage in Peg Games, which involve jumping pegs and generally ending with a given peg in a specific spot. You can also do Paper Games (my favorite), where you can play Hangman, Dots and Boxes and its triangular cousin, and a game they call Color Snakes, but I’ve always called Crossings. Eh. There’s also a Puzzles section, with the requisite sliding-tile game and the aforementioned Sokoban derivative. And, lastly, there’s Checkers.

The A.I. in Gobs of Games is all over the map. It’s near perfect in Dots and Boxes and Triangles, requiring you to be exceedingly careful in every play. On the other hand, I’ve never lost a game of either Snakes or Color Snakes (which, by the way, are not related to each other in any way). Both are mildly entertaining, but once you’ve beaten the computer consistently ten times in a row, there’s not much point. I’ve never been a big fan of the Peg Game genre, and the fact that the major difference between most of them is that you start and end in different spots (wow!) makes it all the less interesting. And why, oh why, is Tic Tac Toe in here? Not even 3D Tic-Tac-Toe, just plain ol’ 3x3. Ugh. The Boxes puzzle game is neat, but it has way, way too little documentation in the manual to explain how to play it. And sliding puzzles... eh. The only really redeeming thing on Gobs of Games is the Checkers game, which is actually pretty solid. I found myself entertained by it long after I had stopped playing the rest of the titles on the cart, but it still didn’t really satisfy me. It was all right, but not excellent.


Difficulty:

Once again, Gobs’ difficulty is all over the map. Some games are trivial to beat the computer in; others, it wails on you from the start and never really relents. When you play against another human, of course, the difficulty depends on how swift they are.

Game Mechanics:

The controls in Gobs of Games are simple enough, and get the job done. The menus are a little tedious, and I especially did not like the way that the Puzzle section was set up. Having to scroll down every time I beat a new Boxes puzzle is not fun at all. The pointer in Checkers is a bit touchy, but it’s nothing that you can’t get used to quickly. Moving on the triangular grids is something of a pain as well, but it’s not absolutely terrible.

With a tacked-on theme and wildly varying gameplay, Gobs of Games is hard to honestly recommend. It’s a decent little checkers game, and it’s got a few other diversions scattered here and there that may interest you. But in the end, it’s nothing particularly special, and nothing that you can’t do better with a pad of paper and a few pencils. Chances are you can spend your money better elsewhere.


-Sunfall to-Ennien, GameVortex Communications
AKA Phil Bordelon

GameBoy Color/Pocket Driver GameBoy Color/Pocket Bubble Bobble

 
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