Submit | Contests | Top Rated | Reviews | Previews | Guides | Cheats | Screens | Scores | Videos | News | Forums | Blogs | Register | Login | Users | Staff | Links | Meta
HonestGamers: Intelligent gamers wanted... and rewarded!
Arcade :: Dreamcast :: DS :: GameCube :: iPhone/iPod :: Macintosh :: PC :: PlayStation 2 :: PlayStation 3 :: PSP :: Wii :: Xbox :: Xbox 360 :: Retro & Import
Earn prizes and eliminate ads just by contributing content on your FREE user account. Click for details or register today!


Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy Twitter giveaway Nancy Drew: Warnings at Waverly Academy Twitter giveaway
Just by participating regularly on the site, you can become eligible to receive free stuff like games, systems, gift certificates and more! HonestGamers, where intelligent gamers are wanted... and rewarded!
Dance Dance Revolution Konamix video game review Looking for a good read?
Check out a selection from our database of more than 6000 video game reviews! djskittles has written a Dance Dance Revolution Konamix review and figures that the game deserves a rating of 9 out of 10. What do you think? Check it out, then be sure to leave feedback or chime in with one of your own!

Systems > PlayStation > O > Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee > Staff Review

Sign into your user account to view or leave feedback for this review. Don't have an account yet? You can click here to open one. It only takes a minute, and it's free!

Review by Brian Rowe
July 25, 2007

What does it take to be a video game hero? Is it flashy armor, Prozac-resistant angst, car-hurtling strength, or a sword the size of Texas? It could be any of these, but I suppose poor Abe will just have to make do.

As far as Mudokon slaves went, Abe had it pretty good as a janitor for Rupture Farms - makers of such fine snacks as Scrab Cakes, Paramite Pies, and Meech Munchies, until the Meeches went extinct. Little did he know that the company’s future was in jeopardy. Profits were down and meat sources were running dry, but boss Molluck had a tasty new treat in mind – Mudokon Pops. It might be time for Abe to find a new line of work.

Armed with a loincloth and sheer determination, gangly, blue-skinned Abe’s first goal is to escape the factory, and preferably not wrapped around a wooden stick. Moving ahead one room at a time, he will have to maneuver past booby traps, treacherous drops, and an army of gun-toting Sligs. The odds are already stacked against him, but this big-hearted Mudokon can’t turn his back and abandon his fellow slaves to the meat grinder. With a little ingenuity and a surplus of luck, Abe just might be able to save a few on the path to freedom.

Abe does manage to escape, but his victory is only a prelude to the heroic destiny that lies ahead. Through the premonitions of a native shaman, Abe sees a purpose for his own pitiful existence, and a future without brooms or floor wax. He will venture beyond the Monsaic Lines, holy caves of the native Mudokons, and into the proving grounds of Scrabania and Paramonia. In these tainted, but still sacred lands, Abe will gain the skills and perseverance to return to the factory and become the savior of the Mudokons and the hope of restoring Oddworld.

Abe is not completely defenseless. He does have a mouth after all, but he isn’t much of a biter. He laughs, whistles, greets, groans, and says, “Follow me.” It’s not the most impressive skill-set, but it comes in handy when Abe needs to distract a Slig or lead a slave to safety. His true special ability though, is chanting. With this rhythmic mantra, Abe can unlock certain doors, activate teleporting bird-portals, and even possess the simple-minded Sligs. Now, combine them all. Possess one Slig, command the slaves to duck, drill the other guard full of bullets, and watch the possessed Slig’s body splatter the room as your power makes a nasty exit.

With a forebodingly somber score and intricately detailed, pre-rendered backgrounds, Abe’s Oddysee is a sensual luxury, but the gameplay is straight from Out of This World, and just as hard. Abe can run, jump, and roll, but this is far from being an action game. The environments are broken into a series of static screens, and each screen brings a new puzzle to be solved. Some will be as simple as leaping across a small gap or rolling under an obstacle. Others will have you dumbfounded, anxiously memorizing enemy patterns from the safety of the shadows. If one thing is for sure, it’s that you will die, a lot. Thank goodness for infinite lives.

The difficulty alone will keep most people from ever completing Abe’s Oddysee, but the maddening checkpoint system will seal the deal for all but the most devoted. One automated checkpoint may be in the next screen over, and then, five screens over. It isn’t long before the difficulty gets dialed to eleven and you will be doing the same multi-screen puzzles so many times that the word ‘repeatedly’ doesn’t quite cut it. Flip a switch in one room, dodge some enemies in the next, deactivate a bomb, make a few death-defying leaps, and just when you get to the end, a rock falls from the sky. It’s all about trial, error, and restarting. Get one section wrong and you have to do it all over again. At least Abe’s Oddysee is a beautiful game, because the scenery will be burned into your retinas.

With buttery-smooth controls, inventive puzzles, and disgustingly lovable cast of character, Abe’s Oddysee is nothing short of stunning. I just hope that you are ready for a challenge. Turning a cliché upside down, Abe’s Oddysee is a game that you will hate to love. It will beat you relentlessly without mercy while you cry in agony and curse its very existence, but in the end, it will be one of the most endearing games you have ever had the displeasure to play.


Rating
8
Excellent
Most of the elements of this game come together in fine form, meaning it's an experience you won't want to miss.
Read more about the review rating scale...

Staff reviews represent the opinion of the individual staff member that wrote them and do not necessarily represent the opinion of the site staff as a whole. If you disagree with the contents of this review, you may click to leave feedback on our dedicated forum. Thank you!




HG 2009 Fundraising Progress: $312 / $2500 (12%)
.
.
.
.
.
.
Click to learn about the Fundometer or to advertise.

Game Profile & Content All NA EU JP AU
Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee (PSX) game cover art
Staff Score (Avg): 8.0
User Score (Avg): 8.0
Press Score (Avg): N/A
Reviews: 2
Guides: 1
Cheats: 0
Ratings: 2
High Scores: 0
Screenshots: 5
Videos: 0

Title: Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee
Genre: Adventure
Publisher: GT Interactive
Developer: Oddworld Inhabitants
Release Date: October 27, 1997
ESRB: T


Do you own this game? Register for a free account to track it and other games in your collection!

 Voice Your Opinion...
 Average User Rating (2 ratings)
Only registered users can rate this game!
PlayStation discussion forums

 While you're here...

Castlevania: Symphony of the Night Castlevania: Symphony of the Night is another PlayStation game in the Adventure genre that has been attracting activity lately, so you might want to check it out and see what all of the fuss is about!

Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee screenshot
Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee screenshot
Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee screenshot

   

Site Info | User Help | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | Site King
© 1998-2009 HonestGamers
None of the material contained within this site--from reviews, guides, cheats, fiction, and editorials to message board posts--may be reproduced in any conceivable fashion without permission from the author(s) of said material. This site is not sponsored or endorsed by Nintendo, Sega, Sony, Microsoft, or any other such party. Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee is a registered trademark of its copyright holder. This site makes no claim to Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee, its characters, screenshots, artwork, music, or any intellectual property contained within. No opinions expressed in any review, guide, cheat, fanfic, or editorial necessarily represent the opinion of the staff or any site sponsors.
eXTReMe Tracker