
Best. Pac-Man. Ever. Yes, I know its pretty darn clichéd to declare things the Best_____Ever these days, but this is simply how I feel about Pac-Man Championship Edition; this game is Pac-Man, perfected. Now let me tell you, I love Pac-Man. When I was a kid, I dumped untold amounts of quarters into that game, and its brethren Ms. Pac-Man, Pac-Man Jr., Super Pac-Man, the hacks, all of 'em. Yes, as a kid I had the Pac-Man Fever. But the thing is this, much like pneumonia or bronchitis, once you get 'the Fever', you never really lose it.
I've sought out and played countless renditions of Pac-Man over the years; I had the red-LCD table-top 'Arcade Machine'; the Atari 2600 & 7800 versions (btw: Pac-Man on 2600 = Worst.Pac-Man.Ever., but I still played the hell outta it, it was Pac-Man!); the superior (but not arcade perfect) NES version; the GameBoy version (but unfortunately not the GBC version, which apparently had an awesome 2-player mode); the GBA Pac-Man Collection (still not arcade perfect, even with the power of GBA!); Namco Museums for each generation of hardware; the Plug & Play versions; the good spin-offs and semi-sequels (Ms. Pac Man, Pac & Pal, Super Pac-Man, etc.); the bad spin-offs and semi-sequels (Pac-Mania, Pac-Land, Pac-Man Arrangement (ugh), etc.); internet flash-based Pac-Man games; the good ol' arcade hacks back in the day (speed-up, slow down, special effects, etc.); and the countless stream of Pac-Clones over the years, both good and bad. Yep, I think I've played them all. I even have MAME running on my cell phone for the sole purpose of running Pac-Man & Ms. Pac-Man on the go, anytime, anywhere (I think I've paid into the Pac-Empire enough to not feel guilty about these emulations). I really do dig Pac-Man, see, and this is why I'm so over the moon for Namco-Bandai's latest Pac-Man effort, as they've taken the game I love and truly updated it and improved upon it in each and every way.
Unveiled at the Pac-Man World Championships in New York City (kinda like SMB 3 was in The Wizard, as the finalists had to compete for the final prize on this new, unknown game, as opposed to the one they knew & played so well to get there), and the first designed by the series' creator Toru Iwatani (who retired from game design with this amazing game) since he created the original, the game was made available exclusively through Xbox Live Arcade. That might be the titles' only downside really, its current exclusivity, as I would love to see this released as an actual arcade machine, or to be able to play it anywhere on Nintendo DS, whenever the urge hits. But, that may still happen down the road, for now though, let me tell you why if you only download one game off XBLA, it should be this one (although if for some reason you hate all things Pac-Man, get Geometry Wars, as it too rocks).
The game now plays in a widescreen presentation, unlike the vertical presentations of prior versions. Instead of level after level of essentially the same damn screen with only the speed and patterns of the ghosts and the types of fruit changing, you now get one timed level, the screen split into two halves, with the ghost house in the middle of the two. You still try to escape the clutches of the ghosts (still Inky, Bliky, Pinky, and Clyde) while chomping pellets to clear the screen, but there's a new twist here; once you clear one half, a piece of fruit (or item like a Galaxian Ship, Cake, Key, etc.) appears on the other half, next to the ghost house. Eating this fruit (or whatever) causes the half you just cleared to re-populate with pellets, and alters that half of the stage into a different maze altogether.You repeat this process over and over, while the pace quickens with each cleared maze, until you either run out of lives, or time expires, and the lone goal is the same lone goal of its arcade ancestors: getting an unbeatable high score by clearing wave after wave of pellets, and chomping ghosts. That brings up another twist on the classic formula: chomping ghosts. You still eat them when they turn blue after eating a power-pellet, but now you can chain these together into a high scoring combo if you can eat another power-pellet before the 'attack phase' time runs out. The point value for the blue ghosts grows and grows from 200 to 3200 (where it maxes-out) with each successive ghost you eat in a combo, and you'll keep getting 3200 points for each ghost you can keep squeezing into that combo. Here's a little video I put on YouTube of one of my scores, to give you an idea of the play-mechanics at work here.
Pac-Man has always been about Zen-like concentration, whatever method you approach it with, whether it be running one of the various patterns for each level (personally, for me, the only way to 'finish' or even attempt to 'finish' the original game), or Billy Mitchell-style where you just react to the situation from second to second, the game was designed to always keeps you on your toes (and to keep making you die, & dump in more quarters). This aspect of the game is still ever-present in Pac-Man CE, in fact its been turned up to 11. The game now has a truly frantic pace (which does build gradually), as both the ghosts and Pac-Man himself gain more and more speed as the mazes get cleared. You can also gain a little teeny-tiny speed boost by turning early around corners (Pac-Man emits sparks when doing this), which adds even a little more depth to clearing mazes as well. Extra lives are a lot easier to get, but as an extra emphasis on not dying, the point value of each pellet munched now goes up after a certain amount are cleared, starting at 10 points each, and maxing out at 50 points each. You'll obviously get a much higher score crunching 50 pts per pellet than 10, so while you'll most likely have enough lives to finish the level, the less you die the better your score's gonna be. This point raising is also true of the fruits, as the score for each fruit or item increases the further you progress.
All of this gives you multiple ways to play, as there are different strategies you can employ to get that super high score you're after. You can concentrate just on chaining ghosts together into huge combos, or on clearing as many pellets as possible without dying, thus gaining 50 pts. each pellet, or just focusing on getting the ever-increasing-in-value fruits or items (which in the later stages give you tons of points). Or of course you can try to do all 3 at once, trying to find that delicate balance between them all that will put your score in a place of prominence on the worldwide online leaderboards. At the end of your run, you're given a total breakdown of exactly how and when you scored each and every point, so you can study where you went wrong, or see when you picked up a ton of points, and how (ghosts, fruit, or pellets). Very, very cool feature. There's 6 different modes for your selection: Challenge Mode 1 & 2, Extra Mode 1, 2, & 3, and of course, Championship Mode. The main differences between them are their layouts and themes, with some having much less power pellets than others and some having really tight boards for you to clear, or some starting at top speed, or having the entire stage in darkness except for the area around you and the ghosts, and their length (Challenge Mode 1, Extra Mode 3, and Championship Mode all have 5 minute timers, the rest, 10 mins.). As it is basically the same game across all modes, you'll likely find yourself sticking to your favorite one and trying to master it, playing the other modes for variety and practice. For me, and likely most of you too I'm sure, that mode is Championship Mode, the 'main' variation in the package. But they're all good. Think of it like the old 2600 days (if you were playing back then), where you could 'change' the game into other modes (extra difficulty, more ships, enemies, etc..), but it was essentially the same game each time, and you mostly just played the main game anyways.
Namco has tried many times over the years to re-invent Pac-Man, to varying levels of success. I feel that the only true sequel to Pac-Man previously has been Ms. Pac-Man (which was, honestly, more fun to play, and a better game), and that wasn't even made by Namco, but the American distributor of the game, Midway (after purchasing the rights to a hack of Pac-Man called Crazy Otto, then sprucing it up with a bow), after they grew impatient for Namco's official sequel to the then-worldwide phenomenon. That game, Super Pac-Man, did come, and while a great game in its own right, it just didn't quite feel the same. There were no pellets for one thing, as you ate pieces of fruit instead. It wasn't the same. They tried to make Pac-Man cool and 3D-ish with the isometric PacMania, which retained the style of mazes and the pellets, and even added jumping (!), but that game just wasn't much fun to play at all. The abomination that was Pac-Man Arrangement was really the closest they ever came to it prior to CE, as they really tried to stick to the look of Pac-Man, and really tried to implement new things (speed dashes, new, weird ghosts, warps, dynamic and colorful stages, etc.), but it all just worked out to be an utter mess.
No, this time they absolutely nailed it, and surpassed it, as this surely stands as the definitive version of Pac-Man. This isn't the same game you (or your father,..God I'm getting old...) remember, but there's more than enough of that game's spirit and style here to make it a worthy successor to the throne. The looks, updated and made retro-future cool with the bright neon look and widescreen presentation, the gameplay, which is the same, but somehow better (and I don't know how they did it, but this game controls like a dream with the 360's analogue stick. Really!), the sounds, which retain their nostalgia from earlier games, even the new music (yes, music) for the game strangely fits too. As I said above, the only thing I could ask for is for this to be released on more systems, as I crave a Nintendo DS version of this game like you wouldn't believe (Namco Museum DS is among my most anticipated titles coming for any system, as it contains arcade perfect Pac-Man (with proper screen-ratio too, with the DS in 'book-style'), and Pac-Man Vs.! Oh Joy!), and I think that this game would find a much, much larger audience on that and other systems. But hey, I ain't got nothin' to complain about here, I just want to sing this titles praises to all gamers, and I encourage you all to at least download this and give it a try. But be warned, as you too may come down with 'the Fever', of which there is no cure.
- Kimo
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