![]() ![]() ![]() The three playable characters, two male and one female are your typical fare. The game does have a save feature allowing you to continue where you left off but you start with the lives you had so if you're not having a good game then saving ain't gonna do you a bit of good at all. In order to finish the game you're looking at spending about three hours from start to finish. You have to traverse across ten stages each broken down into several small areas and defeat a boss at the end of each of the stages. ![]() Now that the world is overrun by mutants it's your job to defeat them and prove that normal humans are fully capable of being the top race in the world. Humans are considered inferior now to genetically created mutants. ![]() You take the role of three humans in the future. Mutant Rampage: Bodyslam starts you out with another one of those weak and derivitive storylines told by ultra campy animated video. When it was all said and done most of the "real games" not all of them, mind you, were ultimately mediocre, this one included, but at least they gave CD-i owners enough substance to at least sink their teeth into. Philips outsourced this game to Animation Magic, creators of the infamous trio of Zelda games, who set out to make what turns out to be another playable yet mediocre game. It seemed that Philips finally realized that pushing their game console as a multimedia only system was not working and late in its life cycle they started releasing real games for it that used a real controller and actually had some depth to the game play. I'd bet that most of you would never believe that the CD-i ever received a beat'em up game on the system but it managed to. "Well, it's a beat'em up, that's almost a good thing, I guess." ![]()
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