Starsky hutch saved game




















Until you earn points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Giant Bomb users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved. Tweet Clean. Cancel Update. What size image should we insert? This will not affect the original upload Small Medium How do you want the image positioned around text? Float Left Float Right. Cancel Insert. Goofs Not only are viewers supposed to believe that cops would use valuable resources time and money to play a game, when Hutch phones Starsky, instead instantly of telling Hutch that his life is in danger due to soup ingested laced with botulism, Starsky merely tells him that Hutch won, and to give up the game, without providing a reason as to the urgency of stopping their silly game.

Quotes Det. User reviews 3 Review. Top review. Crazy Fun. This episode is not even remotely believable, but it is good crazy fun. It's kind of absurd actually so you just have to go with the premise. One detective trying to hide from another detective and something goes terribly wrong.

One detective knows that something is wrong and the other doesn't. And the whole time they're trying to outsmart each other. You will be totally confused. If you've seen at least a handful of episodes then you can enjoy this. And it is fun. Details Edit. Release date September 19, United States. United States. Greek English. Spelling-Goldberg Productions. Technical specs Edit. Runtime 1 hour. Contribute to this page Suggest an edit or add missing content.

Edit page. See the entire gallery. And while it still has kitsch nostalgic appeal, it's not exactly how we remember it. As a kid, it was all about the car - the mythical Ford Torino aka the Striped Tomato - and it's tempting to remember it as one long action sequence. Watching the programme now, there are episodes where the car barely features, the titular characters more concerned with adopting risible foreign accents and carrying off some ill-advised comic routine.

The two key actors in the game, however, are voiced by generic dullards. Some authenticity is added by the sterling work of Antonio Fargas, who reprises his role of Huggy Bear, the jiving grass with his finger on the pulse of the street. Fargas provides a competent voice-over, relaying the narrative such as it is and is just about worth his fee. To be honest, it's nice to know that he's still earning. As for the action, it is simply a relentless tyre-squealing festival of automotive destruction, almost exactly like the feverish childhood memories of the show.

Split into different seasons, each contains six episodes that typically involve chasing a car, with Starsky driving and Hutch hanging out of the window shooting. As well as stopping the baddies getting away, you also have to keep viewers interested by performing stunts, not driving into pedestrians, or simply shooting power-ups.

Lose the viewers, and it's game over. A curious concept, with the protagonists aware that they're in a TV show, though whether they know they're in a computer game, we'll leave to the philosophers. The shooting doesn't really involve any aiming as such; as long as the car is facing the right way, you should hit the target, enabling you to pick off all manner of power-ups such as extra speed and grip.

The only modicum of skill is introduced when shooting the inhabitants of the car you are chasing. If you manage to get close enough, the target will turn red, causing slightly more damage. The car itself handles pretty much as you'd expect, with unspectacular physics and arcadey controls, which means keeping up with fleeing bad guys is a pretty unchallenging task, and the whole game can be completed in a fairly short amount of time. And that's about it.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000