Konami Digital Entertainment, Inc. today announced that Lost in Blue: Shipwrecked!, developed exclusively for Wii, has shipped to retail stores in North America. The latest installment in the Lost in Blue series allows players to explore the mysteries of the island with the help of trusty pets and new friends as they search to find a way out or make a new life there forever.
GamingLives looks back at Lost In Blue, musing over the difficulty of a game which, on the face of it, looked like it would be a walk in the park.
"I’m just amazed that the box doesn’t puff hydrogen cyanide in gamers’ faces when they open it, it would be far more effective and a superb time saver."
A list of five games that defined the most fun representations of survival in gaming. From games that simply utilized certain survival elements to games that relied entirely on survival.
DayZ has changed the way I look at the term "Survival" in games. After playing it I can't think of any other game that is as true to the name of the genre. After all your only task is to survive.
I love Lemmings (even lemmings 3d) but I wouldn't exactly call it a survival game (at all). Survival is the background story, but there's no hunting, gathering, stealth, enemies, exploration, etc. It's simply a level based puzzle series.
BeefJack writes: "It is Survivor without the game show element and although it seems very kiddy at first, don't judge an island by the trees, it's a game of discovery, basic strategies and survival. You start the game as Aiden Sanders having to abandon ship when the luxury liner you are aboard starts to sink, Titanic style. The next thing you know you are washed up on a deserted island with only Hobo, your pet monkey as company."
Positives:
* Easy and fun to play
* Various plot threads, apart from just basic survival
* Lots of mini-games
* Inventive use of the Wii controllers
Negatives:
* The map is useless
* Characters only speak a few words with the rest having to be read via subtitles
* Hunger, stamina and hydration levels deplete too rapidly