Primal (PlayStation 2)
Manufacturer: Sony Part number: 71422
- CNET Editor rating: 3.5 stars Very good
- Overall score: 7.9 (3.5 stars)
- Average user rating: 0 stars No reviews, write one!
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| Not yet rated | In stock | Enter zip code to get total price: Price +Tax +Shipping =Total price | as of 12/08/2009 |
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Gamespot editors' review
Primal (PlayStation 2) price range: $2.75 - $19.99
- Reviewed by: Greg Kasavin
- Reviewed on: 03/24/2003
- Released on: 03/25/2003
At the beginning of Primal, a hulking demon assaults the lead singer of a heavy metal band just after his show, making off with him to who-knows-where and leaving his girlfriend unconscious and at death's door. Jen, who looks like she'd go out with the lead singer of a heavy metal band, is rushed to the hospital, and she eventually awakens from her coma, thanks to a diminutive gargoyle named Scree, who urges her to follow him into a strange, chaotic alternate reality and to help restore balance both to that world and to hers. Jen's not terribly interested in playing the heroine, but she'd definitely like her boyfriend back. That's where you come in: Primal challenges you to help Jen and Scree help each other as they explore big, seamless environments, solve puzzles, and battle enemies. This action adventure game features some excellent production values, between its outstanding graphics and first-rate voice acting, and it also has some clever twists and original ideas. At the same time, Primal isn't a fast-paced game, and its core gameplay and mechanics aren't always much fun since there's a lot of legwork involved and a lot of locked doors. But it's still a showcase game for the PlayStation 2 and one that will particularly appeal to fans of other occult-themed action adventure games, such as the Soul Reaver series by Crystal Dynamics.

Jen and Scree make an unlikely yet likable duo as the main characters of Primal.
These obstacles take many forms, though many of them take the form of locked doors or other doorlike devices that need to be activated somehow. You'll use teamwork to get past these. Scree can scale some vertical stone surfaces, so often he'll be able to climb right over a wall that's in the way and then open a door from the other side so Jen can get through too. Or, Jen might find a narrow crack in a nearby wall, one that she can slip through but that's too small for Scree, and then find a way for her companion to meet up with her. The two have other powers. Jen gains the ability to transform into several different demonic forms during the course of the game, such as one that has sharp claws and powerful legs and another that can swim. Scree can possess inanimate stone statues and absorb the life force of defeated enemies, which Jen can then use to replenish her own health. All in all, Jen and Scree make a pretty unusual pair of protagonists, and likewise, the puzzles in the game are integrated well enough into the environments that they usually seem natural rather than contrived.

You'll explore a dangerous world, but there's more exploration than danger.
Specifications
- Manufacturer: Sony
- Part number: 71422
Product Basic Spec
- Platform PlayStation 2
- ESRB rating Mature - Blood,Violence
- Genre Action
- Elements Fantasy Action Adventure
- Context Fantasy
- Number of players 1 Player
- Sound Dolby Pro Logic II
- Resolution Widescreen,480p
Game
- Developer SCEE
- ESRB Mature
- ESRB descriptors Blood,Violence
- Max number of players 1
- Release date 2003-03-25
Manufacturer info
- Sony
- Manufacturer profile
- Browse Sony products on Shopper.com
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- Website: http://www.sonystyle.com
- Address:
16765 W. Bernardo Dr., San Diego, CA 92127 - Phone: 1-877-865-SONY
- Email: contact@sel.sony.com
- Fax: 941-768-7790



