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OMG! High School Triple Play Pack

Score: 50%
ESRB: Teen
Publisher: Legacy Interactive
Developer: Legacy Interactive
Media: CD/1
Players: 1
Genre: Themed/ Puzzle/ Action

Graphics & Sound:

OMG High School Triple Play Pack packs three themed games into one DVD case: Clueless, Mean Girls and Pretty in Pink. All three games are aimed at girls and are based on a teen movie from either the 80's, 90's or 2000's. I find the mix of movie choices for the games odd since a gal who probably enjoyed Pretty in Pink back in the day isn't necessarily the same target audience as Mean Girls. But anyway...

The graphics for all three games all look Flash-based. There is some level of detail to be found, but overall, the appearances are pretty average. For the most part, characters from their respective movies look like they should (except for Cher in Clueless), but since they really aren't animated much more than simply looking left or right, it's kind of boring.

For the sake of brevity, I will include links to our previous reviews of both Clueless and Mean Girls and mainly focus on the remaining title, Pretty in Pink, a hidden object/matching game. In this game, I found that often times, the objects wouldn't be scaled properly such that a safety pin would be the same size as a pair of boots. Admittedly, I don't play a lot of hidden objects games, but it seems kind of weird and somewhat unfair to size objects incorrectly. This was sometimes a hindrance in finding objects.

Sound is ok. There is no voice acting whatsoever to be found, but the music is pretty decent in Pretty in Pink, with a very 80's feel to it. They aren't songs you can specifically pinpoint, other than strains of the title song, but they feel right for the era.


Gameplay:

Once again, Clueless and Mean Girls have been covered in depth in their own reviews and are a paper dolls dress-up game and a Puzzle Quest-styled game, respectively. Pretty in Pink is a combination hidden object and matching game. It pretty much follows the story of the movie and you are tasked with either getting Andie ready for school by locating a variety of weird objects in her room or fixing her dad breakfast by finding objects around the kitchen. You might also have to rearrange a picture by swapping out tiles, or match colored outfits or record covers to LP's in a memory-styled game. Finally, there is a cooking game that gives you a selection and list of ingredients to prepare the recipe, plus some instructions. Here, you must figure out the correct order to introduce the ingredients based on the logic behind the instructions. For example, the salt is added after the ham; the ham is not the first ingredient - things like that. The games that are not the hidden object games can be skipped after you have spent a few minutes on them. Other than that, there's not much to it.

Difficulty:

The main difficulty that I found in Pretty in Pink was that sometimes I would have to pixel-hunt to select the object I needed and also, some objects were incorrectly scaled. As far as pure difficulty, you are given ample time to locate the objects and you are also given a Hint system which you can use several times. Once you have used it, one of the remaining objects will be highlighted (sometimes this worked and sometimes not) and you can then select it and eliminate it. There is a bar underneath the Hint button and once it fills again (about 30 seconds or so), you can select another hint. Overall, it's a pretty easy game.

Game Mechanics:

The controls in Pretty in Pink are all mouse-driven. You simply click on objects to remove them from the list of objects you need to find. In the matching games, you'd click to reveal two items and if they matched, they'd disappear. If not, you had several minutes to keep on trying or could skip it all together, if you desire. Cooking required that you click and drag an item into the pot. That's about it.

However, the game locked up on me twice during my gameplay. The first time, it actually blue-screened by brand new computer, which was really disappointing. I was forced to reboot, losing all of my game progress. I restarted the game and replayed the 5 or so levels I had completed and it didn't lock up at the same spot. I figured I had better save in case it happened again, although there is no obvious way to save between levels. When I went to the Main Menu button, I thought I would be given the option to save, but it asked me if I wanted to leave the game and go into the Main Menu, so I didn't because I didn't want to lose my progress. I continued playing and I guess I got about halfway through the movie/game when during a game where I had to click to remove the empty soda bottles littering Steff's home, the game started it's tricks again. I clicked to remove a bottle and the pink sparkling particle effect that happens when you correctly select an object kept on going. Strange. Then I clicked on a rubber duckie (which is a bonus item, along with sports cars, supposedly to determine who you go to prom with, Duckie or Blane) and the audio sound indicated that the game gave me credit for finding the duck, but the duck remained, all the while the carpet is still emitting pink particles. Then I finally found the last soda can and the carpet twinkle froze as did the screen. I realized my timer hadn't been counting down for the last 30 seconds. Happily, the game progressed on to the flash animation which progresses the story and I was tasked with creating a food dish. However, instead of going to that page, it reverted back to the frozen page with my timer still at 2.49 minutes, the duck still there and the now static pink sparkles on the carpet. And there it stayed, locked like a bank vault. Thus ended my experience with Pretty in Pink and the entire OMG High School Triple Play Pack.

While Clueless and Mean Girls weren't technically broken, Pretty in Pink definitely was. My PC is quite new and has really high specs, so there's no reason a game with such low specs should freeze up, but that's what happened. While the hidden object and matching games weren't terrible, they just weren't all that much fun and having the game crash on me twice and lose all of my progress was definitely a mood killer.

I honestly can't recommend this title. Yes, you get three games for $20, but we've all seen these type of games before and done better. If you are a crazed fan for the movies, go to Legacy Interactive's website and download a trial version before investing the money and don't say you weren't warned.


-Psibabe, GameVortex Communications
AKA Ashley Perkins

Minimum System Requirements:



Windows XP or Vista, 32MB Video Card, 512MB available RAM, DirectX 9.0c or newer, Compatible Soundcard, 1 GHz processor with a current hardware accelerated 3D graphics card
 

Test System:



Windows Vista, 2 GHz AMD Phenom 9500 Quad-Core Processor, 8GB RAM, Realtek High Definition Audio On-Board Sound, NVIDIA GeForce 8300

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Game Vortex :: PSIllustrated