DuckTales: Remastered will release across North America and Europe as a digital download for PC, PlayStation®3 computer entertainment system, Nintendo eShop on Wii U™ and the Xbox 360® games and entertainment system from Microsoft® starting from today. DuckTales: Remastered is priced at $14.99 / €14.99 / 1200 Microsoft Points.
GenrePlatformers
Platforms pc
DEVELOPER WayForward Technologies | PUBLISHER Codemasters | RELEASE DATE
DuckTales Remastered Reviews pc
strategyinformer.com review
No matter how annoying these aspects can be, though, they’re part of the charm. Ducktales Remastered is a nostalgia trip from start to end, frustrating, life-taking warts and all. There are mine cart levels, collectibles that ding when you pick them up, a bank vault full of money that exists for no reason other than to let you dive in. It’s clear that this was a project of care and love, with attention to detail ever-present – everything new is there to accentuate the old, and it results in a game that brings retro into the modern era with barely a hiccup.
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everyeye.it review
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darkzero.co.uk review
I can’t see many people who grew up only knowing what a virtual gun is accepting the shortness and difficulty curve of DuckTales Remastered. Modern gaming is different, so I feel that this is for fans that loved Scrooge McDuck’s worldwide adventure. And for those people, well, you are in for a mostly good time, as you’ve been served a remake with charming visuals and faithful gameplay created by developers who appear to be big fans of the original, but couldn’t quite keep their hands off injected some modern storytelling to upset the balance of the game.
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pcgamer.com review
Outside of levels, Scrooge’s office contains the level selection hub, a museum to purchase concept art with money collected on adventures, and a vault where Scrooge can swim through the money you’ve collected over multiple playthroughs. Extras such as being able to play in 8-bit mode a la The Secret of Monkey Island: Special Edition, or even an emulation of the original would have been fantastic. Heck, why not throw in the original soundtrack while you’re at it? DTR needs these things because a game that’s going to stay this true to its ancient self has got to offer more than antiquated gameplay. Without them, it ends up feeling like that doodad on your grandparents’ mantel—interesting to look at, but tough to figure out why it exists in the first place.
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