• Home
  • Games
  • Reviews
  • Previews
  • Features
  • Forum
  • Blogs
  • Friend Codes
  • Podcast
  • Members
  • About
  • news News Updates
    News as a Blog
    News as a Blog

    Colorz

    Colorz (WiiWare)

    Rate:

    Add to CollectionAdd To Wishlist

    Developer

    Exkee

    Publisher

    Exkee

    Genre

    Action

    Players

    3

    C3 Score
    6
    Reader Score (0 Votes)
    n/a

    Posted on 26.09.2009 User Icon Posted by Mike Mason (Mason)
    Tag Tags: Colorz, 5, Exkee, Exkee, Action
    Colorz is cute, bright and filled with primary colours. It may astonish you, then, to find that it's actually one of the hardest single player games I've ever played and makes my head hurt. Sometimes in a good way, sometimes in a bad way.
    Taking control of alien spacecraft, your aim is to get to a landing platform at the end of each stage by floating through the worlds avoiding circular enemies that can act as walls as well as flying about. Taking inspiration from games like Ikaruga, you can alter your ship's colour by flying through warps that repaint you and to defend yourself you absorb any enemies that match your current hue. This starts off basically enough - you could be red and there might be just red and blue circles about, so naturally all you have to do is gobble up the red and dodge the blue. Points are gained the more you destroy, and the longer you keep a combo up by besting enemies in rapid succession. They're also earned by being a daredevil and playing chicken with the enemy, brushing up against colours that can harm you so that sparks fly off ('scratching', the game calls it). Take it a millimetre too far, though, and away goes one of your lives.

    The complexity begins after this. Soon you are asked to control up to three craft simultaneously and must mix the ships' colours to get through blockages. For example, purple enemies will appear, so temporarily weld red and blue fellows together red and blue. Unfortunately, the control of multiple ships probably gives peoples' brains too much credit - only with time, dedication and an inherent ability to multitask to extreme levels is somebody going to be good at the single player mode of Colorz. Your default ship is controlled by the Wii remote pointer; it'll trail around after it with a small delay. The next ship you are given is controlled with the analogue stick. Things are difficult now, as it's tough to focus on the two different characters floating around and separating their movement onto the two different controls, but it's doable with some effort and if you try to take things slow. It reaches the level of impossibility with the addition of the third and final ship, which is mapped to the d-pad. If following two ships was learning algebra for the first time, three ships is quantum physics - show me somebody that can competently, consistently move a trio of characters in multiple directions, destroying enemies and avoiding losing lives (shared over all ships) while using three different input methods and I will happily shake his hand and weep at my ineptitude. It might have worked if the inputs were similar; the two analogues and the d-pad on the classic controller, for example.

     

    While a great concept, it just doesn't work for single player once you have progressed beyond the second world; it's too much to process. The saving grace is the multiplayer, which is for up to three people using remotes, each in separate command of one of the ships, which works far better. The core gameplay remains, but rather than struggling with the gaming equivalent of patting your head, rubbing your tummy and doing a jig simultaneously each person just looks after their own craft and a co-op dynamic is added, as you're having to constantly communicate to decide when to merge, who is going to go for the extra lives, and to tell each other to clear paths for each other. It's still difficult, what with the need to coordinate effectively, the screen speeding up and slowing down, the overflow of different colours - but it's the right level of challenge. This is where the fun in Colorz really is, and if you want to avoid frustration it's probably the one and only way you should play it right from the start.

     

    Gameplay

    7

    On your own, forget it; you're not going to do well. With friends, though, the simple concept with the vicious difficulty manages to shine through.
    Graphics

    7

    Big, chunky, colourful visuals. Looks great, though later things do become a little difficult to fathom with the amount on screen.
    Sound

    6

    The technoish music fits the mood, the sound effects are satisfying, but I object to having the word 'loser!' shouted at me every time I end up on the game over screen when I'm playing a genuinely difficult game.
    Value

    6

    Not worth it at all if you're playing for single player alone, but if you have friends willing to put a little towards it, go for it.
    6

    /10

    C3 Score Colorz plays well, but sadly the challenge is too high for one player due to the insane amount of coordination needed. The best thing to do is to find one or two other gamers willing to split the cost with you and buy it for the multiplayer experience alone, as outside of the difficulty the gameplay is great and worthy of a go.
    Please post your comments below.
    Buy Colorz

    Reader Comments

    1
    WE ARE THE DY-NAS-TY!
    Number of comments 1180

     L55 Snake

    Offline

    Looks...weird.....but nonetheless good job Mason
    [img align=center]http://i636.photobucket.com/albums/uu87/Captian/CaptianHERE-2.jpg[/img]

    John:
    I..I can't watch porn. My Mommy finds out
    :}
    on 26.09.2009 at 12:47
    My User Card | Games | Blog | Reviews | Friend Codes | PM Me 
    Guest

    0

    Reply Quote  #2

    Guest User

    on 31.10.2009 at 14:47
      
    Reply to this Topic
    Guest posts will need to be approved by a moderator. For instant posting, please login or sign up for a free acccount.
    Your Name:
    FeedSubscribe to this topic
    To keep up with comments, you can view and add the RSS feed for this topic. (Find out More)
    1
     
    About C3
  • What is Cubed3?
  • The Team & Contributors
  • Advertising Opportunities
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contribute & Share
  • Submit News Tip
  • AddThis Social Bookmark Button

    Our Button: