GameBoyz: "My first exposure to Prince of Persia came earlier this year at E3. I still recall being blown away by the slick looking visuals when I had my first glimpse. The game had an original look about it and the demo I was treated to was impressive to say the least. Being the natural skeptic that I am I wanted to hold off my judgement until the final version was released this holiday season. Well the game is now in stores and after some playtime with the Xbox 360 version my emotions are mixed. On one hand it is a great looking game, but on the other hand I found myself a tad under-whelmed and far too, dare I say it, bored after only a couple of hours into the game."
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.