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  REVIEWS / GAMING
EA The Godfather: Blackhand Edition Wii
Company: EA

Pros: Wii controls let you get into the action

Cons: Some of the big characters have been relegated to supporting roles


Product rating:



 
 
 
 
 
         
 
   

 

"Games Review: The Godfather: Blackhand Edition (Wii)"

By Futurenet | Published:04/04/2007

We audition the latest Godfather for the new Nintendo Wii console...

The Wii finally has its first free-roaming, Grand Theft Auto-style car-crime game, and it's... The Godfather. Again. It's been a full year since the multiplatform mob drama first arrived in game form, and the appearance of The Godfather: Blackhand Edition on Wii means it's officially hit every single platform except the DS and mobile phones (although we're willing to bet The Godfather: Touch Madness and The Godfather: Horrible Mobile Edition are already in the works, somehow).

Still, given that it's been a year, publisher EA knows full well it can't get away with just putting out the exact same game with updated graphics. In fact, Blackhand Edition updates nearly everything except the graphics, aggressively retooling the overall experience and adding a bunch of new content while mostly leaving the visuals alone.

The story and basic gameplay remain the same, though - you're still a young hood from Brooklyn, recruited into the Corleone crime family and set on a path that parallels the events of the film. You'll still run and drive around 1940s New York, battling rival mobsters, taking over businesses (most of which are fronts for illegal rackets, which you'll also have to muscle in on) and carrying out every key offscreen event from the movie. Like, say, sneaking a severed horse's head between a Hollywood producer's sheets, or taking down all of the Corleone family's biggest rivals in one climactic murder montage.

It's a strange way to adapt a film, and die-hard fans might not approve of characters like Sonny and Michael being relegated to supporting roles. But the production's backed up by a compelling script and top-notch voice cast, so it works surprisingly well.

This edition of The Godfather for the Nintendo Wii incorporates the console's motion-sensing controls so you can have your hand in the game's thuggery – literally – as you go out swinging so you can take out your enemies.

Graphically, it looks much the same as the Xbox 360 version, but this extra interactive element definitely gives it the edge.

 

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