Press Your Luck is probably one of the most popular game shows of the 1980s, but despite this, there hadn't been an official software version of the game for over two decades until Ludia launched Press Your Luck 2010, part of a suite of game show adaptations by the company.Ludia's version of Price is Right was relatively well received by casual and hard core game show fans alike (despite what some reviews on Amazon may say), so I was disappointed to see that they missed the mark a little bit with this release.First, the good.The show's primary draw, the Whammy, is faithfully reproduced with over 50 Whammy animations.This includes some newly-created Whammys (mostly hilarious) as well as throwbacks to some Whammys used on the original show.It shows the designers "did their homework".The gameplay is nearly identical to that of the original show as well.The question round has been simplified somewhat to make all questions multiple choice (in the original, the contestant who buzzed in gave a verbal response and his opponents could choose from multiple answers), but other than that the gameplay is faithful.The graphics of the set and the "big board" itself are also faithful to the show, with two notable exceptions.
The first exception is that the prizes on the gameboard are all trips with a singular value.The actual show prided itself on giving away a variety of prizes, some good (like cars) and some bad (like Flokati rugs).The main tenet was that the prizes on the board were constantly changing and their values were a mystery.This led to suspense and strategy when a prize or a decision square was hit, because the contestant would not necessarily know the prize value in advance.By making the prize values static and unchanging, the designers have taken a huge shortcut that cheapens the value of the game.
Lastly, and this is undoubtedly a nit-pick, but the iconic sound heard when the randomizer flashes around the big board is strangely cut short in this game; it's only heard for the first second or two after the board starts spinning.Seeing as the designers went as far as to obtain the actual board sound used on the show, this is most assuredly a bug in the code.Unfortunately a format like the Wii does not lend itself to quick bug fixes.
In a nutshell, Press Your Luck 2010 for the Wii can be best described as a good start to reviving software versions of the franchise, but there's a ways to go to make it a completely faithful experience.
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Press Your Luck 2010 Edition Wii
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