With over five years having passed since Jackass went off the
air, releasing Jackass: The Game on the PlayStation 2 in late 2007 might
seem like bad timing. Indeed, this minigame collection with a grimy
coating of gross-out humor, gleeful sadomasochism, and calculated bad
decisions would've felt much more essential had it been released nearer
to the run of the show or the theatrical release of one of the Jackass
movies. It might feel a little mercenary, and the minigames don't break
any new ground, but for those who have maintained a fondness for that
special blend of shopping carts, hilarious underwear choices, and vomit,
Jackass: The Game does a good job of capturing the spirit of the show.
Setting itself up as a kind of lost fourth season of the show, Jackass: The Game puts you in charge after regular Jackass
director and accomplice Jeff Tremaine is dealt some very personal
bodily harm during an impromptu stunt gone awry. The season consists of
seven episodes, and for each episode you'll have to produce five stunts,
which you'll play through in a series of minigames. There are a few
short cutscenes showcasing the Jackass boys' juvenile tendencies
interspersed throughout the season, but most of the game's personality
comes through in the actual gameplay.
Staying true to the source material, the stunts here can range from
complicated, big-budget gestures of stupidity, such as destroying a
suburban home by playing golf with hand grenades, right down to the
simple joy of repeatedly kicking your friends in the crotch. Some are
ripped almost verbatim from the show, such as the gag-reflexive "egg
gulp" stunt, the rhythm-based Party Boy stunt, and the "wee tattoo"
stunt that tests your ability to draw a tattoo on an unstable target.
Others turn down the Jackass and turn up the Tony Hawk, allowing for
stunts that, in real life, would end up involving the police and
next-of-kin, such as the "pachinko precipice" stunt that has you
flinging a Jackass down a rocky cliff in an attempt to rack up as huge a
hospital bill as possible.
As with any minigame collection, there are some that you'll play once
and never want to play again, while others will keep you coming back
time and again. Jackass is at its best when it's simple and gross,
which, luckily, is most of the time. The game never even bothers to
explain the controls for any of its stunts, instead just tossing you in
and hoping for the best. With rare exception, it's all you need,
partially because they're intuitive, and partially because a number of
them have simply been lifted from another game and grossed up a bit.
The game gets a good amount of mileage out of its stunts by giving you a
number of objectives within each of them. Sometimes they're just
tiered, score-based objectives, though often they're diametrically
opposed to one another, requiring you to approach the stunts in
radically different ways in order to complete them. Still, even if you
work to complete every last objective, which you don't need to actually
finish the season, the whole thing shouldn't take but a couple of hours.
Outside of the season you can play the challenge mode, where the
objectives are generally harder and you can earn cash to unlock extras
like props, character models, and clips from the show. There's also some
multiplayer options, including round-robin and random round-robin, as
well as the provocatively named "ass-to-ass" mode that lets two players
go at it in a small selection of stunts. The multiplayer options are a
little spartan, and you get the sense that they shaped the modes to
accommodate the stunts they had, instead of making the stunts with
multiplayer in mind in the first place.
The visuals are stripped down, too, though the ugly, bland, back-alley
locations actually end up helping the game look more like the show.
Nearly the entire cast of Jackass regulars, minus
skater-turned-reality-TV-star Bam Margera, are in here, and while their
likenesses are generally bang-on, all of their voice clips sound stiff
and stagey, which goes against the unscripted, casual feel of the show.
The soundtrack ends up being much more complementary, including noise
from bands like the Anti-Nowhere League, the Circle Jerks, CKY, and
Nashville Pussy.
Jackass was the ultimate example of "don't try this at home"
television, making it fertile ground for a video game adaptation. Even
though it's missing the schadenfreude element that permeated the show,
Jackass: The Game has the right attitude, and it still manages to elicit
the occasional chuckle with its sophomoric hijinks
JackAss (690.94 MB)
Selasa, 07 Desember 2010
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