Gamestyle:
"If it sounds like we're ragging on this new Prince incarnation, it's more out of personal disappointment than this actually being a bad game. As a game in its own right it's entertaining, well-constructed and does retain flashes of the old Prince brilliance. It's very short, though that still means it makes an excellent choice for a weekend rental. If you want a truly great 3D Prince of Persia experience, however, we'd recommend tracking down a copy of The Sands of Time instead."
The mind behind Prince of Persia shares his family’s life story as well as his own as a videogame developer in an emotional and very personal book.
With the release of The Lost Crown this week, let's take a look at every Prince of Persia game released since the series debuted.
If you’re a gamer “of a certain age”, you may vaguely remember the moment when games went from a grueling gauntlet requiring all your skill and concentration to tackle to a casual, checkpoint-containing, cruise control-encouraging walk in the park.
I beat Jurassic Park multiple times!
Jurassic Park had no save system, so I would leave the console running while I went to school, took breaks. It's not that it's hard, it's just tedious. But I was a Jurassic Park obsessed kid (around 13 when this hit), so I would obsessively scower ever inch of the maps (both 2D and 3D) until I had them memorized.
The Star Wars trilogy, I only beat w the cheat codes.
with the exception of Jurassic Park and Prince of Persia, I've beaten every other one of those. It just takes practice and time. Something I had way more of when I was younger.