It follows - no, closely guards itself to all the guidelines of platform games and rarely strays from the formula. Indeed, Wrath of Cortex can be summed up as textbook. So there's that: the textbook story for every platform game. It's up to you to find these crystals, right the elemental balance and restore order to the Earth. So he creates a super being to oppose Crash, and fools with the Elemental Powers, erupting a destructive force unto the planet which scatters a series of crystals all around it. Cortex, over the course of several Crash adventures, has grown weary of consistently falling to the Bandicoot's heroic wins. The character, always the nemesis of the Naughty Dog designed series, has a giant 'N' tattooed on this forehead, a detail that may or may not have symbolized something more than his name at one time. Neo Cortex: square-headed with tuffs of hair on the sides, clearly insane, and filled with a hate for Crash Bandicoot. New vehicular play styles: control a jeep, fly a hang glider, pilot a mech and more.More than 30 new levels including a volcanic island, a Japanese village, an African jungle and more.Classic Crash play style updated for next-generation consoles.In the end it's a fun, formulaic 3D platformer, but unlike the industry itself the game has changed very little from the first Crash title on Sony's last console, which dates the experience considerably, especially compared to Nintendo's current cream of the crop. The title, developed originally by Traveller's Tales and ported by Eurocom Entertainment, arrives nearly identical to the already-released PS2 original complete with very little in the way of technical improvements. So here we are, writing a GameCube review for Universal Interactive's Crash Bandicoot: The Wrath of Cortex.
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