10°
7.6

Digital Chumps: The Wizard of Oz: Beyond the Yellow Brick Road Review

The Wizard of Oz is a classic tale of imagination that was first introduced as a novel in the year 1900. Later, the tale was translated into one of the most classic movies of all time, which has held up as a masterpiece over the last 70 years. Nearly everyone has seen the classic film and most would agree that its majestic portrayal of the Emerald City makes it one of the most enchanting stories to date.

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digitalchumps.com
40°

Videogames and the Oscars

gamrReview's Xavier Griffiths: "Movie tie-in games have a reputation for being notoriously bad and shoddy, doing both a disservice to the original film and videogames as a medium. More often than not the movies that get adapted into videogames are high octane, action-oriented summer blockbusters and the aim is simply to extract as much money from the market as possible. Realistically no one expects games based on trashy films such as Catwoman, The Cat in the Hat, or Eragon to be good in the first place, but what about games based on films that have garnered recognition for the highest award in cinema?"

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gamrreview.com
50°

5 Best (Worst) Movie Games

A list saluting horribly wonderful movie games like Street Fighter: The Movie and The Wizard of Oz: Beyond the Yellow Brick Road.

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technologytell.com
10°
4.0

Thunderbolt: The Wizard of Oz: Beyond the Yellow Brick Road DS Review

In a cluttered RPG market on the DS there isn't any real reason to recommend The Wizard of Oz. The new story is generic, the exploration hampered by unnecessary backtracking and the dreaded locked door puzzles. An interesting combat system is ruined by the default party actions and clunky menu navigation. This certainly isn't what L. Frank Baum had in mind, there aren't even any flying monkeys.

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thunderboltgames.com