Search PalmPower's 487 Palm-related article archive 
Home
EasyPrint
News details Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
Articles-only Click here for the RSS feed's XML code. This is not a browser URL.
PRODUCT REVIEW
Fun and games: Austin Powers and Serious Sam
By Claire Pieterek

If you're looking for action and adventure for your Palm handheld, Global Star Software (at http://www.globalstarsoftware.com) has it. Their Palm OS games run the gamut from sports to strategy, killing aliens to killing time. I received two Global Star products that fit the bill quite nicely: Serious Sam: The First Encounter, and Austin Powers Pinball. From these titles, you know you're in for a ton of fun.

Both products support both grayscale and color devices, which is nice. The packaging is professional and quite eye-catching, as you can see in Figure A.

FIGURE A

Serious Sam's packaging is attention-getting.

Serious Sam: The First Encounter
Serious Sam: The First Encounter is based on the eponymous PC game developed by Croteam. It was named GameSpot's 2001 PC Game of the Year. Indeed, GameSpot called it "an unpretentious, no-nonsense arcade-style shooter." And that is just what it is-much like Duke Nukem, or Robotron--the more enemies you can manage to knock off, while keeping yourself out of trouble, the better off you'll be. It's pictured in Figure B.

FIGURE B

Serious Sam is your standard first-person shooter game.

There is a bit of a plot, but it really doesn't matter if you read it. As with most games, it doesn't tell you much, and it doesn't really help. What you really need to know is this: the Up button moves you forward, the Down button moves you back, the ToDo list button shoots, and the Memo Pad button is the strafe lock. Tapping in the Graffiti area is supposed to change weapons, but I guess you don't get anything other than the six-shooter in the Tourist area.

I've really lost a lot of my skills at this style of game since I left the network administration business. Quite a few of us used to use Doom and Quake to do network load testing. Some of us were even able to justify putting in Ethernet switches that way!

Serious Sam offers three levels of play: Tourist, Normal, and Serious. I died early every time in the numerous games I tried in the Tourist level, so I'd rate this as good for people who are more serious about their arcade-style gaming. Also, I found it somewhat difficult to pick up some of the smaller items, since there is no way to move diagonally.

Criticisms
However, I have a couple of bones to pick with the people at Global Star who wrote and edited the box copy. The system requirements don't match up in the two paragraphs devoted to the subject. There's a generic system requirements paragraph that lists just about every Palm OS device under the sun, and a more specific system requirements paragraph that is exclusive to Serious Sam. The first paragraph says "any device that supports Palm OS (3.0 or higher)." The second paragraph says "Serious Sam: Requires a minimum of OS 3.5 or above to run." Make it one or the other, please. It turns out that the second paragraph is correct.


1  ·  2  ·  Next »
Other articles you might like
Home > Phones and PDAs > Palm and Treo > Software (211 articles)
   TealOS: great Palm software you are prohibited from buying
   CallRec gives your Treo better call recording
   Edit Office files on the go with Documents To Go
Home > Reviews > Software > Palm (195 articles)
   TealOS: great Palm software you are prohibited from buying
   CallRec gives your Treo better call recording
   Edit Office files on the go with Documents To Go
Home > Games > Palm Games > Arcade Games (6 articles)
   Hellfire: Apache vs. Hind
   Get in the Olympic spirit with Crazy Athletics II
   Crazy Olympics 1.5
Get Weekly Email Updates
Subscribe to our regular weekly email newsletter. It's packed with tips, reviews, deep analysis, and the latest news.
 
Other PalmPower Articles
Palm gets up to date with new Tungsten family of handhelds
Create handwritten email with riteMail
Presenter-to-Go puts PowerPoint presentations on your Palm OS handheld
Looking for the cutting edge
Gain remote access to databases and PLCs
PalmSource Open House showcases what's new in the Palm community
Analysis: handheld market share
More from the ZATZ journals
Computing Unplugged: The iPad defenders have spoken
David Gewirtz Online: CNN commentary and analysis
DominoPower: Application development, William Shatner, and the origin of the universe
OutlookPower: More about disappearing text
ZATZ Home  ·  News  ·  Back Issues  ·  Credits/Trademarks ·  Link To Us
Copyright © 1998-2010, ZATZ Publishing. All rights reserved worldwide.
Editor's Login