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Overall I did enjoy my time with Rayman 2. This rocket riding section just did not work and so the fact you have to do it while fighting the final boss is infuriating. The final boss is already hard enough in this game but you are given very little room to manoeuvre, you can only attack on certain points, and you will die in one hit. I did not expect every idea that Ubisoft has to work in this game but this one in particular is horribly frustrating for one big reason. Warning: There will be spoilers until the end of this paragraph so skip this if you do not want to know. You have very little control over a rocket that will always accelerate and blows up on the slightest touch. However, when they added flying to the mix it became horrible. Most of these sections are fine but I did find the game bugging out once or twice due to the games physics. You are given very little control except the ability to speed up and sometimes jump off. Throughout the game you have sections where you ride on a missile with legs. So what doesn’t work? The rocket sections.
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This mechanic works fairly well and they manage to add to it without causing frustration. One level has you following a whale and having to swim through his rings in order to get oxygen. Another example of a gimmick that works is, surprisingly, the underwater sections. Here, it functions much in the same way: To cross surfaces that would otherwise kill you and to reach higher ground. An example of a good mechanic is the bouncing fruit that appeared in the first game. In order not to become stale, Rayman 2 throws new things at you in almost every level, whether they are puzzles to solve or an item to ride. The camera and misjudging jumps are occasional problems in this game although this is nothing uncommon for a 3D platformer. In Rayman 2 every enemy feels like a sub-boss and requires a lot of punching and dodging. You notice this in the racing stages as you run and jump a lot, while combat is fine, though very uncommon. Jumping too can be a pain because if you are not moving fast enough Rayman will not jump far at all. Occasionally Rayman will not grab a wall or ledge and fall straight to his death you must be precise. Rayman can climb, hover, jump and punch enemies which will all come in handy throughout the adventure but just once or twice did I find myself messing up because of something out of my control.
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Rayman 2 as a platformer works really well at times and then other times it really doesn’t. It made me not want to care about collecting everything-a real first for me.
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Add to the fact that every one of these levels is the same and you have the most unlovable mini-game I have ever played. These bonus levels are the worst thing in this game they have you rapidly tapping A+B on the controllers consecutively in order to race a pirate to the end of the level and it is impossible. Getting all of the lums and breaking all of the cages gives you a bonus mini-game at the end of each level that can get Rayman more life or a power-up. Lums are a necessity to unlock the later levels, but the caged people are just there as collectibles (except for a few that must be got). The core gameplay of Rayman 2 has you running through each level in a mostly linear fashion while collecting golden lums and rescuing freedom fighters from cages. Now, Rayman 2 is a 3D platformer and because of this it has many tropes that you expect from 3D platformers at this time. It is in Rayman 2 that Ubisoft decided to dive deeper into the lore of the Rayman world, and many of the characters found in this game will reappear in later Rayman games. Why? Because Globox has brought with him a silver Lum from the fairy Ly which gives Rayman just a bit of his power back. It is not until Rayman’s friend Globox gets captured that Rayman has a chance to escape. This includes Rayman who starts off this game in prison with his powers stripped from him. In this game, the evil robot-pirate Admiral Razorbeard is imprisoning all of the inhabitants of the world. Sometimes these experiments pay off and sometimes they fail miserably. Rayman 2: The Great Escape was not Ubisoft’s first attempt at a 3D game but you can tell that they were really trying to experiment in this title. These games are 2D platformers much like the original Mario games and, much like Mario, Rayman also took a step into the 3D realm on the Nintendo 64. Ubisoft has recently been taking Rayman back to his platforming roots with Rayman: Origins and Rayman Legends.