Tokyo Jungle really is a game unlike any other. As a large assortment of different animals, you explore an overgrown and deserted Tokyo, slowly piecing together the mystery of what happened to all the humans. And when I say âa large assortment of different animals,â I refer to everything from deer and wolves to elephants and dinosaurs.
The game is best described as a 3D platformer with a locked camera that creates an almost 2D planeâexcept that you are able to move into the foreground and background at will. The controls are simple and basically break down into the following actions: sneak, dodge, bite, claw, and eatâregardless which of the animals you play. The trick of the game is not mastering the controls, but rather mastering when to use each action.
Tokyo Jungle consists of two modes: survival and storyâof which survival is the far more complex of the two. The point of survival mode, as you may have guessed, is to survive as long as possible. But that is only a small part of how the game is played. After you choose an animal, you start the game outside Shibuya station. From there, you hunt animals (or plants if youâre an herbivore) for food, mark your territory, and eventually mate with another of your species. But as you spend time in each area, the food supply dwindles and you are forced to move on to richer hunting grounds. Moreover, each new area possesses dangers of its own, whether that be predators from far higher on the food chain or radioactive rain slowly poisoning you to death.
WHY: Because it is one of the most unique games to come out of Japan in the last decade.
TOKYO JUNGLE
Developer: PlayStation C.A.M.P
Platforms: PlayStation 3 (via the PlayStation Network)
Released: June 7, 2012 (Japan), September 25, 2012 (NA), September 26, 2012 (EU)
Type of game: Platformer
What I played: All 14 story levels and many games of survival modeâincluding the co-op survival mode.
My Two Favorite Things
Stalking prey and then executing a perfect stealth kill.
The moment when I saw a scared lion lead an army of hyenas against a pride of rival lions in Harajuku Station.
My Two Least-Favorite Things
Having to play survival mode over and over to unlock each story level.
The sudden and multiple-hour-wasting difficulty spike right before the end of the game.
Made-to-Order Back-of-Box Quotes
âIâve never before had to wonder if a cheetah could rip the jugular out of a velociraptor.â âRichard Eisenbeis, Kotaku.com
âWatch out! Itâs a (Tokyo) jungle out there!â âRichard Eisenbeis, Kotaku.com
To keep the game interesting, each ten-minute chuck of survival mode comes with its own list of challenges that change every time you play the game: fully claim âXâ territory, have children, eat over a certain amount of calories, defeat a mini boss, etc. Also, completing special missions will often unlock new playable animals, while completing all possible objectives in a ten-minute chunk nets you a large experience bonus (which can be used to purchase the already unlocked animals from the in-game store).
Story mode, on the other hand, is far different from survival mode as it shows the human-less world of Tokyo Jungle through the eyes of some of its most heroic animal denizens. One level tells the tale of a pack of beagles finding a home, while another focuses on a cackle of hyenas going on a stealth mission through Tokyoâs sewers. There is very much a tongue-in-cheek aspect to the writing as several of the story levels chronicle a tale strikingly similar to the Lion King, while another set follows a pit bull going on a vision quest to learn from his spirit animal. And by the time all these clever and often entertaining stories are done, you will have solved the mystery behind the complete lack of human presence in Tokyo Jungle
https://lastchance.cc/tokyo-jungles-twisted-take-on-the-lion-king-5917632%3C/a%3E%3C/p%3E
Tokyo Jungle is perhaps the most original game to come out of Japan in recent years with its unique concept, entertaining tongue-in-cheek writing, and competent controls. And while some may find it monotonous, completionists will happily spent countless hours unlocking the roster of over 50 different animals. In the end, Tokyo Jungle is not a perfect game by any stretch, but itâs very much worth the price tag.