NXUS says:
"You’re a blob. No, I’m not calling you fat, it’s exactly what you are when you play UTV Ignition’s metallic puzzler Mercury Hg. In a nutshell, the game relies on the player tilting the game world so as to guide the blob from start to finish via perilous paths, colour-reliant switches and moving platforms. Spanning a total of 60 levels (and 30 bonus levels) the game starts off simply enough in a series of tutorial stages separating the core elements that compose the game into easy bitesize chunks."
Is Mercury Hg in it's element on 360?
Here's a snippet:
"The main objective of Mercury Hg is to guide a blob of mercury through a maze like play area littered with traps and obstacles to reach the goal whilst keeping as much of the solution together. This is done by using the left stick to control the mercury and the right stick to tilt the maze to get a better perspective of proceedings."
A collection of 10 of this fall's most oddly-named offerings -- and why you might want to play them.
Goofy title aside, Stealth Bastard looks awesome.
Too bad there's no Mac version.
That Catball game looks trippy as hell. The dogwall eats the entire level? What the heck...
Ignition Entertainment is once again attempting to expand the audience for their once humble Mercury franchise with a brand new digital release. Mercury Hg is available now on Xbox LIVE Marketplace and PlayStation Network for Xbox 360 and PlayStation 3 respectively, and is the very first version of the videogame designed specifically for the high-definition (HD) formats.