As Dumb as it Sounds Review

As Dumb as it Sounds

For years, a company called Hasbro Interactive has been very successful at

making a quiet fortune selling more “family oriented” types of games that the

“hardcore gamer” didn’t even know existed (Monopoly, Clue, Life, Wheel of

Fortune
etc.). Lately, with the publishing of HEDZ and soon-to-be-finished

Glover (new Mario64-type of game for the N64), Hasbro has been making

an effort to jump into the more mainstream gaming market. A valiant attempt

but, in the case of HEDZ, Hasbro should have stuck with another board game conversion.

Let me start off

by saying that games with wacky, random or improbable plots can work… but,

in the case of HEDZ (that’s Head Extreme Destruction Zone), the game just comes

off as completely pointless. Here’s a quick synopsis of the game’s half-baked

story: A race of aliens who all look the same decided to go to earth and steal

human heads to use as their own (sort of like a hat). Soon this “headhunting”

became the craze and turned into a legal sport. You play an alien headhunter

participating in an intergalactic head-hunting competition (yes, that last cheesy

line was taken right from the manual), and try to collect all 200 HEDZ.

Just how does this translate to gameplay? Well, basically you run around a

level shooting people (which are really just aliens wearing human heads). If

you kill them and can grab their head in time, it goes in your bag and you can

equip it whenever you want. Each head has its own attributes including power,

range, jump height, toughness and top speed, which makes for somewhat interesting

strategies as different heads must be equipped to pass different parts of each

level.

Also, you can grab money lying around and spend it on regaining health or interchanging

heads in the middle of a game. Simple? Yes. Boring? Yes. Tiresome? Hell Yes.

The game itself plays similar to other Tomb Raider-style shooters on the market

with one major difference: you cannot look up and down (reminiscent of the oh-so-famous

Doom age).

The player can carry

around 5 heads at one time in addition to the number of heads collected throughout

the level, which are held in the backpack. Each head only has its own individual

health and ammo, all of which replenish when the head is not in use.

The entire game is played with a 3rd person, Tomb Raider-style camera angle.

But, as you might have guessed by now, graphically this is no Unreal.

Levels are extremely simple and consist of a number of stairs, boxes, lifts

and opening doors. All characters (including yourself) are obvious 2D sprites

and, while there are some cool graphical effects, like some explosions, the

majority are utterly simplistic and flat.

Now, VIS (the developers) does deserve credit in a couple of places. First,

the music. The rock-style background music throughout the game is definitely

a plus. Second, the game’s depth. While playing the game can get tedious, the

fact that the game has 200 different, unique heads definitely deserves some

praise. Lastly, HEDZ supports multi- player via IPX, TCI/IP and modem. Microsoft’s

Internet Gaming Zone should support it in the near future.

Unfortunately, the bottom line is that HEDZ just is not a fun game. The game’s

abstract plot has very little to do with the gameplay as there is nothing in

the game hinting to what the hell is going on with any kind of story. And the

gameplay just isn’t good enough to stand on its own. Basically, playing the

game feels completely pointless. Whatever you are looking for in a game, it

isn’t here.

  • Depth (200 heads)
  • Pointless plot
  • Simplistic graphics
  • Tiresome gameplay

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Depth (200 heads) Pointless plot Simplistic graphics Tiresome gameplay
Depth (200 heads) Pointless plot Simplistic graphics Tiresome gameplay

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