Rascal (video game)

Rascal

North American cover art
Developer(s) Traveller's Tales
Publisher(s) Psygnosis
Composer(s) Andy Blythe and Marten Joustra
Platform(s) PlayStation
Release date(s)
  • EU: March 1998
  • NA: March 31, 1998
Genre(s) Platform
Mode(s) Single-player

Rascal, known as Bubblegun Kid (バブルガンキッド) in Japan, is a platform game developed by Traveller's Tales and published by Psygnosis (Takara in Japan) and was released for the PlayStation in Europe on March 1998, in North America on March 31, 1998 and in Japan on March 18, 1999. The main character and several enemies were designed by the Jim Henson's Creature Shop.[1]

Plot

Professor Clockwise is in his lab making the final adjustments to his time travelling device, but a large shadow creeps up behind him. Meanwhile, his son Callum "Rascal" Clockwise is walking through a secret route under the house to get to his father's lab when suddenly the lights go out and an alarm sounds. Rascal rushes down to see the problem, but to his horror two aliens in spacecraft appear and chase him down the corridor.

Rascal finally makes it to his father's lab by going through the safe door entrance. He sees Chronon the evil master of time torturing his dad and holding him at gunpoint with another of his dad's inventions called the "Bubble Gun", but the villain accidentally activates the controls for the time machine and he and the Professor are sucked into the portal. The Bubble Gun manages to be released from the portal and lands at Rascal's feet, he picks it up, vowing to save his dad.

Rascal chases the two through time, from Castle Hackalott, to the Aztec Temple at Chichimeca, to the lost city of Atlantis, to the Jolly Raider pirate ship and Dodgy City, travelling to each location's past and present forms and collecting the pieces of a Time Clock from both before fighting Chronon in each area's future. Afterwards Rascal travels to the Corridors of Time, Chronon's lair within the space-time continuum where, after defeating its guardians brought from each of the other time periods, he successfully defeats Chronon and rescues his dad. After escaping using another time portal, Rascal and his dad safely return home, leaving the portal to shatter and trap Chronon in interdimensional time forever.

Gameplay

In the game, the player assumes the role of Rascal armed with the Bubble Gun, in a mission through five worlds involving a medieval castle, ancient Aztec ruins, the aquatic city of Atlantis, a Pirate ship and a Western town. Each world has three forms, starting with how it appeared in the past before returning to how it appears in the present (e.g. Castle Hackalott being a medieval castle in the past where in the present day, it has become a museum); the player needs only to complete the past level to gain access to the next world. In each past and present level, the player has to find the six pieces of the Time Clock in order to access the Time Bubble at the end and be able to access the next form of that world. Each world concludes with a boss fight against Chronon set in what that world might look like in the future and defeating him in all five gains access to the final world. The Bubble Gun has limited ammo and the bubbles it shoots depends on how much ammo is left.

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings48%[2]
Review scores
PublicationScore
CVG1/10[3]
GameSpot4/10[4]
IGN2/10[5]
NowGamer7/10[1]

The game was very badly received by critics and gamers alike. The main criticisms leveled at the game was a relentlessly problematic camera, and loose controls, forcing the player to predict where they will land when jumping off of an object. 3D platform games were in vogue at the time, following the success of Super Mario 64 , Crash Bandicoot in 1996 and Croc: Legend of the Gobbos the previous year. Rascal was perceived by many as a half-hearted attempt to jump on this bandwagon, but it failed to perform as well as expected, although it was praised for its graphics.

References

  1. 1 2 "Rascal - NowGamer". Retrieved 17 February 2013.
  2. "Rascal for PlayStation". Gamerankings. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
  3. Randell, Kim (August 15, 2001). "PlayStation Review: Rascal". Computer and Video Games. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
  4. "Rascal Review". GameSpot. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  5. IGN review. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
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