The Co-Optimus Review of Rayman Legends is based on the Playstation 4 version of the game. Rayman Legends is gaming fun its purest essence. It may briefly disappear during a particular moment of frustration, but then the next level comes along and so does that smile. There have been few other platformers that I’ve played that have resulted in me sitting there with a big, happy grin on my face while I do so. Its release on the next-gen systems is a chance for it get out there more in the public eye as folks wait for more releases on those systems, and I hope that it does. When Rayman Legends was released on the current-gen systems last fall, it did so after a disappointing delay and, like its predecessor, amidst a number of other high profile releases. More than once while I was playing with a friend one of us would move ahead on the screen and the whole screen would shift forward to that person, leaving the other one to become one with the “balloon-iverse.” This doesn’t happen too often, but it can be quite frustrating when it does. What’s more, those levels that are a rush through the stage progress at the pace of whichever player is in the lead and whoever falls behind gets killed. Getting revived right in the middle of such a sequence will usually mean another quick death. Not all of Rayman Legend’s levels are a frantic rush through the stage but many of them do have portions where you’ll be having to run and jump with a fair degree of precision. That particular system of revival doesn’t always work out well. Fortunately, these characters become floating balloon versions of themselves and the controlling player can guide his or her character to another player who simply has to punch the balloon to revive his fallen comrade. All players share the same screen, however, the screen can progress past lagging players leading to some unintentional deaths. Rayman Legends supports up to four players locally with each player being able to select from the many colorful variations of Rayman, friend Globox, Teensies, and the Princesses (ladies in viking helmets wielding battle axes) that are tied to the worlds themselves. All for the low, low price of just $40 and most of which are cooperative, with the exception of the challenges which are limited to just single player. If Ubisoft put out a $15 downloadable title with 6 or 7 full-length levels done in this style, with additional DLC tracks down the line, there’d be a whole new “musical game” boom.Īside from the main campaign, there's a bonus world with challenge versions of the game's music levels, daily and weekly challenges, and 40 remastered levels from Rayman Origins. The only complaint about these levels? They’re too short. While these levels are carefully scripted to hit certain beats and moments just so, they are done in such a way that you don’t feel it.Īll you feel is the joy of running through a level as “Black Betty,” or Antisocial’s “Trust,” or an original work by one of the game’s musical composers, Christophe Heral, plays alongside you. The most famous example is the “Eye of the Tiger” level that was shown off in a trailer for the game. As you run and jump through these levels, you are given a soundtrack that plays in sync with your actions. These levels are more along the lines of the “constantly running, jumping, and timing your jumps right” challenge sort, but they have their own twist. Each of the main five world ends with a boss fight and then a music level. Coming to the gameplay, the game has other new features including sections where players can shoot fists at enemies and rhythm-based levels set into songs like “Black Betty”, “Eye of the Tiger “,” Woo-Hoo “and” Antisocial “.Without a doubt, the best levels overall are the music levels. Murfy can perform a variety of actions such as cutting ties, activating mechanisms, grabbing enemies, and assisting in collecting Lums. In addition, the game has added a number of playable characters such as the female character Barbara of her sisters, by rescuing her at a certain level, followed by the character Murfy, appearing from “Rayman 2: The Great Escape “as a supporting character. Lums are valuable gems, earned by touching, defeating enemies or rescuing victims. In terms of content, the game continues the story of the journey of the protagonist Rayman and his friends, collecting Lums and defeating enemies. The game is welcomed and loved thanks to the game’s visuals, level design, controls, soundtracks, overall gameplay and a large amount of content. The game was build and tested on Windows 10, so other compatability is not currenty guaranteed. It features a lot of new content, including new worlds, levels, minigames and other stuff to collect and complete. It is the fifth game in the company’s “Rayman” series and a sequel to the “Rayman Origins” game. Rayman Redemption is a reimagination of the original Rayman game from 1995. “Rayman Legends” is a popular platform game, developed by the famous game company Ubisoft Montpellier and later published by Ubisoft.
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