Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles (2003 video game)

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles

North American PS2 cover art

North American PS2 cover art
Developer(s) Konami
Publisher(s) Konami
Distributor(s) 4Kids Entertainment (2003-2012)
FoxBox
Nickelodeon (2012-present)
Mirage Studios
Director(s) Yuji Kojima
Producer(s) Kengo Nakamura
Composer(s) Yuichi Tsuchiya
Masanori Akita
Series Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles
Platform(s) PlayStation 2, Xbox, GameCube, Microsoft Windows, Game Boy Advance
Release date(s)

PlayStation 2 & Xbox

  • NA: October 21, 2003
  • PAL: April 16, 2004

GameCube

  • NA: October 21, 2003
  • PAL: April 30, 2004

Microsoft Windows

  • NA: October 21, 2003
  • PAL: April 23, 2004

Game Boy Advance
October 31, 2003

Genre(s) Action, beat 'em up
Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles is a beat 'em up video game released in 2003 by Konami. The game is based on the 2003 TV series.[1] The main gameplay loosely adapts the following season one episodes: Things Change, A Better Mouse Trap, Attack of the Mousers, Meet Casey Jones, Nano, Darkness on the Edge of Town, The Way of Invisibility, Notes From the Underground (Parts 1-3), and Return to New York (Parts 1-3), as well as a level that is not derived from the animated series at all.

Gameplay

The player can play as either Leonardo, Donatello, Michelangelo or Raphael. Each turtle has his own unique set of levels to complete. There is a story mode for one or two players, and there is also a versus mode where two players can fight head to head. In the versus mode, players can fight as all 4 turtles, Splinter, Casey Jones, Hamato Yoshi, The Turtlebot, Hun, Oroku Saki, and Shredder. A Challenge mode is unlockable by defeating Oroku Saki with any Turtle in the Story Mode, which needs to be complete to unlock Hamato Yoshi and his dojo.

Plot

Shortly after a group of mouser robots destroy the turtles' old home, they begin to look for a new home. Michelangelo eventually gets on Raphael's nerves, making Raphael leave to the surface. At the surface, he is confronted by Purple Dragon thugs, Casey Jones, and Dragonface. Baxter Stockman soon uses invisible foot tech ninjas to capture Raphael, and Donatello is forced to rescue him. Afterward, while Raphael and Michelangelo spar for fun, Donatello analyzes a strange crystal he found in their home, noting that they look like mutated brain cells. Raphael kicks Michelangelo into a wall, revealing a large tunnel behind it. Donatello's crystal start glowing and the turtles decide to investigate. They follow the tunnel and they are confronted by genetically mutated humans. After a few scuffles with these mutants, the turtles find that these mutants were turned into their current state by past experiments of Shredder's scientists. The crystals Donatello found are the only thing keeping these mutants alive, and cannot leave their underground home as a result. They plead the turtles to defeat Shredder, so that no more humans will suffer as they have. The turtles decide to defeat Shredder once and for all, and promise the mutants that they will come back for them if they ever find a way to reverse their condition.

Critical reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings61.99%
Metacritic59 out of 100
Review scores
PublicationScore
1UP.comB-
AllGame
CVG4.6 out of 10
Game RevolutionC-
GameSpot6.3 out of 10
GameSpy
IGN5.3 out of 10

Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles received mostly mixed reviews among critics. While praising it for great presentation and graphics, as well as the voice acting being "spot-on", they had problems with the sound, claiming that every time a Turtles would attack, they would say the same one-liner they did the last time they attacked. Most of them also complain that the gameplay has been turned into a very simple button-masher, there are also dumb AI enemies, poor stage designs, 2-players instead of 4, and no block move.

References

  1. "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles". Mobygames. 1991. Retrieved 1 December 2015.
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