I'd seen that there are older threads on this game but didn't want to Necro them, so I started a new one. Anyway, I guess the final part/chapter of the game came out recently and I bought the bundle of them the other day and have played through the first two chapters.
I have to say I enjoy the games but also somehow expected a bit more, mostly because I was a huge fan of the Sierra adventure games like Space Quest, Police Quest and Leisure Suit Larry back in the day (never got into King's Quest) and in comparison these Back to the Future games are somewhat lacking, they're too simple (I, for one, liked the Look, Touch, Talk/whatever icons from those other adventure games, the BTTF game is just one icon that simply changes its function based on who or what it is over) in the interface and even in the story.
In those old Sierra games you pretty much had to look at and pick up everything you encountered and it served some purpose, maybe, later on in the game.
Also in this day and age games that are "open ended" or allow for free-roaming have pretty much been the big thing since GTA3 came out 10 years or so ago so BTTF's linear story telling and constrained method of exploration of the environment is lacking too. Not that I would've expected to get into the DeLorean at any time and travel to any time I wanted but something along those lines would've been nifty, if complex to do on the limited budget from this seemingly small game company.
I also find the graphics somewhat lacking given the power of computers these days, not so much the cartoonish style of them which is fine but it just has a "quality" to them that makes me think of the more limited power on the Wii rather than the much larger power available in PCs these days -but I suspect it was a cross-platform design so the Wii's limited power was taken into consideration.
The voice acting is top-notch, esp. the guy they got to do Michael J. Fox's voice, but in the future chapters I hope to see some time period other than the 1930s that the first two chapters take place in.
I have to say I enjoy the games but also somehow expected a bit more, mostly because I was a huge fan of the Sierra adventure games like Space Quest, Police Quest and Leisure Suit Larry back in the day (never got into King's Quest) and in comparison these Back to the Future games are somewhat lacking, they're too simple (I, for one, liked the Look, Touch, Talk/whatever icons from those other adventure games, the BTTF game is just one icon that simply changes its function based on who or what it is over) in the interface and even in the story.
In those old Sierra games you pretty much had to look at and pick up everything you encountered and it served some purpose, maybe, later on in the game.
Also in this day and age games that are "open ended" or allow for free-roaming have pretty much been the big thing since GTA3 came out 10 years or so ago so BTTF's linear story telling and constrained method of exploration of the environment is lacking too. Not that I would've expected to get into the DeLorean at any time and travel to any time I wanted but something along those lines would've been nifty, if complex to do on the limited budget from this seemingly small game company.
I also find the graphics somewhat lacking given the power of computers these days, not so much the cartoonish style of them which is fine but it just has a "quality" to them that makes me think of the more limited power on the Wii rather than the much larger power available in PCs these days -but I suspect it was a cross-platform design so the Wii's limited power was taken into consideration.
The voice acting is top-notch, esp. the guy they got to do Michael J. Fox's voice, but in the future chapters I hope to see some time period other than the 1930s that the first two chapters take place in.