UGO writes: "Retro gaming may be the (not-so-)new hotness, but releases such as Leviathan Games' Target: Terror, published by Konami for the Nintendo Wii, can only leave gamers wondering why. It's true that there's a certain bent appeal to pushing through the game's 10 levels, all of them filled with gloriously outmoded and endlessly recycled gun-toting Caucasian terrorists. But for $39.99, gamers are right to expect more than a two hour campaign (if that) and a couple of bonus minigames. Especially since even this small amount of game is subject to frequent technical hiccups.
Freedom Isn't Free in Target: Terror
In Target: Terror's world, a terrorist threat has overrun the United States and, shockingly, only you (or you and a friend) can put a stop to it. The first nine story missions are broken into sets of three, each covering a different location: The Airport (Denver International, to be precise), Golden Gate and Nuclear Plant (in Los Alamos, NM)."
D/A+