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7.0

D+PAD Magazine: Who's That Flying? - Reviewed

D+PAD Magazine writes:

Thirty-two years after the release of Space Invaders, it is something of a marvel that shoot ‘em ups are still managing to throw new concepts at gamers – the well should be dry by now with every permutation explored, but titles such as the rather cheekily named PlayStation mini Who’s That Flying? keep popping up. Developer Mediatonic has taken the crisp simplicity of the shoot ‘em up, mixed in an equally crisp and simple twist and concocted an experience that adds yet another string to the genres bow.

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dpadmagazine.com
8.0

Pocket Gamer: Who's That Flying Review

Pocket Gamer: Back in the day, adrenalin junkies could count on intense twitch shooters.

Arcades were filled with fast-paced, explosion-packed shooters – the kind with so many bullets onscreen that you’d be lucky to find an empty space to hide. They were a dime a dozen, but the classic shooter seems to have died with the arcades themselves.

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pocketgamer.co.uk
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TouchArcade: Who's That Flying Review

TouchArcade: Sony’s half-hearted effort to get into the low-cost digital downloads space with the PSP Minis initiative has been disastrous. Its lead platform has been floundering at retail, and I’ve heard from several sources that its support structure is hobbled. That blows for everyone involved, but there is reason to celebrate Minis: good games have, in fact, made it to release. One of those being the ostentatious 2D, shoot-‘em-up called “Who’s That Flying!?”

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toucharcade.com

Gamesradar: Who’s That Flying? Review

Gamesradar: It’s rather surprising how the iPhone app store has amassed a good amount of solid, old-school-styled shooters. One wouldn’t think the touch-screen would be an ideal form of control for these games, but Who’s That Flying?! Has finely tuned controls that give you pinpoint accuracy without obscuring your vision, (you may even have to turn the sensitivity down on iPhone). It’s a scrolling shooter in the vein of numerous classics of years gone by, but it adds several interesting twists on established genre formulas – including invincibility and jokes.

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gamesradar.com