Sonic: Generations isnāt swept up in the HD remake craze weāre seeing with other franchises of a similar age. Itās a different tour of its titular hedgehogās greatest moments, giving some classic 2D levels from the series a 3D interpretation, and vice versa. Fans have shouted for an end to the gimmicks, and for Sega to just give them what made the game great in the first place. This is Segaās response. Should you pick it up?
Owen Good, who may be the sports writer, but can still handle a D-Pad and hum the Green Hill Zone theme, thank you: Sonic sits at the exit door of my first console gaming era, in my late teens and early 20s. I think I last played it in a fraternity brotherās garbage-strewn room with an iguana (which I would later kill) perched on my shoulder. It says a lot that those vivid memories come to life, 20 years later, after hearing Sonicās distinctive Vegas slot-room cacophony of collecting rings to a chiptune calliope.
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The perspective shifts are the gameās real sell, between Acts 1 (2D) and 2 (3D, with some 2D platforming) that reimagine Sonicās best levels (as āmemoriesā Hedgehog) in alternative forms. Some sidescrolling levels get a 3D warp; some levels from 3D-era Sonic get the side-scrolling treatment. Itās a lot for me to keep track of, all I know is in the Act 2 stage of things, I keep my upgraded 3D controls, such as quick direction-shifting on the bumpers or a home-in spin attack.
I canāt speak as a Sonic expert, and the disparagement of the series, especially in its 3D iterations, has become an Internet meme. Iāve yet to have that a-ha moment sieze me where all I want to do is play the game. But if, as an outlier to the Sonic community, I find Generations to be enough of an invitation to get reacquainted, then I canāt help but feel true fans will get an even greater payoff in their high-speed trips down memory lane. Yes.
Michael Fahey, Who Hasnāt Played the Game but is a Giant Cream the Rabbit Fan: No way, Sega. You arenāt getting me again. Iāve gotten my hopes up time and time again, only to have them shattered by sub-par Hedgehog offerings. Sonic Unleashed? Seriously? Screw you guys. Sonic Colors was a step in the right direction, but I refuse to fall for the hedgehog hype one more time. Iāve loved your characters for decades. Hell, my Twitter icon is a custom-made Sonic-style character I commissioned from someone at Deviant Art. Iāve purchased every Sonic game thatās hit the market, but here I draw the line.
So you can keep your two generations of Sonic. Stuff your compelling mix of old school 2D gameplay with tightened up 3D levels. I care not for the return of classic villains and rivals from games past, or levels that pay homage to ones in all the games Iāve loved or loathed before. Not this time, my Japanese friends. This time I have the power.
Yes, dammit.
Stephen Totilo, who grew up playing Mario: My friend had a Genesis. Iād play Sonic at his house. I liked it, but didnāt love it and didnāt become an owner of any new Sonic games until they went 3D and people started saying they stank. I didnāt like Unleashed. I did like Colors, and, from the five or six levels Iāve played of this new one (as chubby original side-scrolling Sonic and as modern 3D-world Sonic), I like this one. In Sonic games I look for roller-coaster speed and I expect to feel barely in control at times and controlled in others. Iām willing to do some platform-jumping, but not a ton. Iām okay with obstacles, so long as I get branching paths. The new gameās got that.
I like the construction of Generations, the presentation of two different designs for each level (to say nothing of the sight of old Sonic meeting new Sonic and friends). I like the trimming of the playable roster, the clean interface and the presence of lots of unlockables to discover. But I also think of modern Sonic games as disposable, since they make at least one new one a year and none of them reach the echelon of elite games. I wouldnāt plan to keep this game, but I recommend picking it up to experience one of the best Sonic experiences than Iāve played in my Dreamcast-and-beyond Sonic ownership. Youāre going to have to care about playing a Sonic games to enjoy this, of course. I donāt think this one is transcendent beyond that (large) crowd. Should you buy the new one? Yes.
Gut Check is an off-the-cuff impression of what we think of a game: what weād tell a friend; how weād respond on Twitter or Facebook or over a beer if someone asked us āWould you buy this game?ā