Rampage: Total Destruction

released on Apr 24, 2006

Total Destruction features four game modes. The first is a campaign in which players work to progressively take out cities around the world. King of the City and King of the World are competitive modes where up to four players compete. In King of the City, players strive to rule a city by dominating the most districts. King of the World is a series of King of the City competitions across various cities. The fourth mode is a time trial where players must complete all the districts of a city within a time limit.


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Os peidos e arrotos eram o ápice do humor pra mim

As someone who hates cities with a burning passion and would love a good game where I could destroy them, I am severely disappointed. This is worse than the arcade games.

low 4/10

This was fun as a kid but I am sure it is not the same game nowadays

Peak gaming. Its all downhill from here

A quite literal translation of the old arcade kaiju-'em-up Rampage into console 3D. Unfortunately, what that means is beyond the goofy humour, fun monster designs, and innate appeal of going Godzilla on famous cities of the world, all you get is a middling marathon of tedious button-mashing, further hindered by janky 3D controls - it's often a struggle to get your monster to actually grab onto and scale a building properly, or to focus on a target you want to attack. The campaign sends you to locales such as Las Vegas or San Francisco - which in practice are divided into stages of indistinguishable buildings, cars, and citizens - and within a time limit, you get free rein to wreck the stage as you please, with the stage ending once all buildings are levelled. But it often feels like you need to carefully fuss around smashing each individual window to actually topple a building, and between that & the finicky aiming, your blows often lack a satisfying impact. The level structure then repeats ad nauseam, and once you've smashed one street, you've smashed them all. There's moves & monsters to unlock on the way, but rather than being a reward for high scores, these come from you beating boring collectathon challenges or just using the right monster on the right stage, so it adds to the sense of turning your 'rampage' into a chore. The co-op's kinda fun in a 'beating up your younger sibling' way, and this comes with a couple of the old arcade Rampages which are decent time-killers, but not much else here to recommend.