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Rambo: The Video Game

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3/10
IGN

Publisher(s)
  
Reef Entertainment Ltd

Composer(s)
  
Jakub Gawlina

Developer
  
Teyon

6/10
GameSpot


Programmer(s)
  
Jakub Lisinski

Initial release date
  
21 February 2014

Genre
  
Shoot 'em up

Rambo: The Video Game Rambo The Video Game Wikipedia

Director(s)
  
Craig Lewis, Will Curley

Producer(s)
  
Piotr Latocha Mariusz Sajak

Platforms
  
PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, Microsoft Windows

Modes
  
Single-player video game, Multiplayer video game

Similar
  
Stealth games, Other games

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Rambo: The Video Game is an arcade rail shooter video game developed by Polish Studio Teyon and published by Reef Entertainment. The game is based on the Rambo film series and puts the player in the role of John Rambo. First Blood, First Blood Part II and Rambo III form the basis for the gameplay as Rambo journeys through scenes from each of the three films.

Contents

Rambo: The Video Game Here39s Your First Look At Rambo The Video Game Rambo The Video

A teaser trailer was released by Machinima, containing montages from the films. The game was originally set to release in winter 2013, but was eventually delayed to early 2014.

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Gameplay

Rambo: The Video Game RAMBO The Video Game 39Reveal Trailer39 1080p TRUEHD QUALITY YouTube

In the game, players assume the role of John Rambo as he plays out scenes from the first three Rambo films: First Blood, Rambo: First Blood Part II, and Rambo III. The mechanics of the game include stealth, demolition, and fighting off enemies using knives and guns using a cover system to avoid taking fire, and the player being moved through the environment by a rail shooter engine. The game also includes destructible terrain and rag-doll physics for animating characters.

Development

Rambo: The Video Game Hold up that terrible Rambo game from 2014 is getting DLC

Reef Entertainment acquired video game development and publishing rights in August 2011 to the Rambo film series from the rights holder StudioCanal. As of August 2011, the three Rambo series films had grossed over $600 million USD. The publisher said the purchase was fueled by the 2008 Rambo's success and by the scheduled release of the action film The Expendables 2, starring Sylvester Stallone. They stated that they planned to use the rights as a launching pad for the company. In August 2011 the publisher said a Rambo game would be released at retail in 2012 and would be available on the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and PC. Jeffrey Matulef of Eurogamer said on October 5, 2012, that he did not believe the game would see release before the end of the year. That same month Reef Entertainment said it would be out "soon".

Reef Entertainment's commercial director Craig Lewis describes the game as allowing players to "get under the skin of Rambo and wield his iconic weapon-set in battle." The developer used the actors from the film series to provide voices in the game for both John Rambo, played by Sylvester Stallone, and Col. Trautman, played by Richard Crenna. However, the developer did not actually hire the two actors to provide voice work (Crenna died in 2003) but instead contacted the owner of the film series, StudioCanal, and acquired copies of the original voice tapes for the series to use in game.

Reception

Rambo: The Video Game has received overwhelmingly negative reviews. Aggregate websites GameRankings and Metacritic gave the Xbox 360 version 40.00% and 28/100. and the PC version 32.93% and 34/100 the PlayStation 3 version 22.50% and 23/100. Reviews criticized the game for its outdated graphics, rail-shooter gameplay, dialogue that is made up of low quality audio bytes taken from the movie series, innaccurate aiming, overuse of quick-time events, frequent crashing/freezing, poor enemy A.I, and very short length (the main story can be completed in 3 1/2 hours ).

IGN gave the game a score of 3/10 citing its on-the-rails game mechanic "feels like an unmitigated waste of time for everybody involved." Destructoid gave Rambo a score of 1/10 claiming that "even the act of shooting doesn't feel impactful or fun." However, GameSpot granted the game a 6/10, saying it was a "fun, simple rail-shooter."

Giant Bomb nominated Rambo for the Worst Game award in 2014.

References

Rambo: The Video Game Wikipedia