{"id":639,"date":"2008-06-08T13:15:44","date_gmt":"2008-06-08T13:15:44","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/danielprimed.com\/?p=639"},"modified":"2012-03-03T04:56:03","modified_gmt":"2012-03-03T04:56:03","slug":"elite-beat-agents-commentaries","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/danielprimed.com\/2008\/06\/elite-beat-agents-commentaries\/","title":{"rendered":"Elite Beat Agents Commentaries"},"content":{"rendered":"
So Elite Beat Agents has been out for a good while now. I received this game as a Birthday present from my brother back in July last year and even back then this game had been out for a while. After I got it, I played EBA for a while and then placed it on the shelf to grow dust as I waded through the sea of games at were at my disposal.<\/p>\n
A few days ago I decided to revisit my old DS friend, currently I am up to the infamous Jumping Jack Flash song which seemed beatable until I realized that this is a significantly longer (and more difficult) song than the rest of the colourful soundtrack. So while I sit here and allow my adrenaline to die off, I want to share a few ideas about this game, not necessarily critique but just a few lost ideas that I wanted to write down.
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When I think of the DS, two games initially spring to mind; the brain straining genius of Brain Age and the stylus pounding genius of Elite Beat Agents. These games represent the original intentions behind the DS hardware like no other game on the market.<\/p>\n
A part of the joy that I get from playing EBA comes from how everything within the game is suited to the hardware and as such this nothing detracts from the overall experience. 2D comic book renders and lite 3D elements conceal the DS’ limited graphical capabilities, music rarely ever sounds compressed but above everything else, the touch screen gameplay and wacky story telling creates one intensely fun atmosphere. Usually when I play a DS game I find it hard not to notice the weaker graphical capabilities, I never really see it as much of a flaw but it always bothers me since it reminds me of how much of a flop the DS is hardware wise. EBA shows no signs of this which is reassuring as to why I feel that this is such a showcase game for the system.<\/p>\n
From my perspective, just like Brain Age; Elite Beat Agents is one of those games that you bought a DS for. And for a more ‘hardcore’ audience, EBA is definitely the stronger of the two.<\/p>\n