

The first disappointment comes with the graphics. Yes, you run about a lot shooting bad guys, yes you have to jump from ledge to ledge quite a bit as well, but for all its Lara-like pretensions, The Mummy falls short by a long distance. But if you're looking for a spiritual successor to Tomb Raider, then you're bound to be disappointed. The adventure begins when Evelyn reads from the Book of the Dead and accidentally reawakens Imhotep, a long-dead Egyptian bad guy who commands his army of mummies to wreak havoc on O'Connell and the crew who delve deeper and deeper into the pyramid.Īs you might expect, the story is largely ignored and takes a distant second place to the Tomb Raider -esque running and jumping antics which dominate the game.
He later returns with Egyptologist Evelyn Carnahan and her treasure-obsessed brother Jonathan. You are Rick O'Connell, a Foreign Legionnaire who narrowly escapes with his life from a battle raging above the ancient and deserted city of Hamunaptra. The Mummy follows the basic plot and characters from the film.

Anyway, if you've read this far, I suppose you'll want to know more about the game. This is a tad unfortunate because ELSPA have given it an 11+ rating. Predator, made the game? Answers on a postcard to: Rebellion's Big Bulging Bank Account, Switzerland.Ĭynicism and possible lawsuits aside, The Mummy is a game aimed fairly and squarely at the younger audience, and as a result isn't particularly suitable for anyone over the age of seven. So why have Rebellion, respected developers of the more than respectable Alien vs. Nothing in the history of videogames, or indeed in the history of anything, ever, says this is a good idea and it's going to work. So when a port from a Playstation game, which also happens to be a film license comes along, it should, by all the laws of common sense, be an absolute disaster. It applies to computer games as well decent Playstation ports come once every century and good film license conversions are so rare, they're a protected species. Things like mint-flavoured peas, ying-yang shaped coffee tables, or a toothbrush that doubles as an earwax remover. There are some things in this world which are doomed to failure before they were even dreamt of by some mad inventor in his squalid laboratory.
