Garfield: Caught in the Act

Garfield: Caught in the Act
Developer(s) Sega interActive (GEN)
Novotrade International (GG)
Point of View (PC)
Publisher(s) Sega
Designer(s) Michael Chung
Art Wong (lead design)
Michael Fernie (programming)
Platform(s) Sega Mega Drive/Genesis, Sega Game Gear, IBM PC
Release date(s)

Sega Genesis/Mega Drive

  • NA October 31, 1995
  • EU December 8, 1995

Sega Game Gear

  • EU December 14, 1995
  • NA November 1995

Microsoft Windows

Genre(s) Platformer
Mode(s) Single-player

Garfield: Caught in the Act is a platform game starring the comic strip cat, Garfield. The game, developed by Sega, was released in 1995 for the Sega Mega Drive/Genesis and Sega Game Gear, and in 1996 was released for Windows PCs. The game was also released for PCs in the Sonic & Garfield Pack, along with Sonic & Knuckles Collection and Baku Baku Animal.

All the sprites were created by Garfield creator Jim Davis and hand-drawn by Davis and the Garfield artists at Paws.

A port for the Sega 32X was planned, called Garfield in TV Land, but was ultimately cancelled.[1]

Story

Odie scares Garfield while he is watching television, and he ends up falling on the television. In a rushed effort to repair the television before Jon catches them, Garfield and Odie attempt to put the banged up and broken pieces together. Without so much as a screwdriver, Garfield quickly reassembles the television, minus a part or two.[2] As Garfield throws away the spare pieces, they become an electronic monster known as the Glitch. The Glitch transports Garfield into the television and now he must defeat the Glitch to make his way out.

Gameplay

The game is a platformer, with Garfield being able to attack enemies up close or throw objects at them (the close-range weapons and objects thrown change between each level). Enemies consist of ghosts, piranhas, crabs, bulldogs, and mummified mice.[2] There are two bonus stages, one of which resembles a Whac-A-Mole game. Each time the player defeats a boss, Garfield takes a commercial break where he rockets through the Television Wasteland, trying for an extra life or a continue.[2]

Versions

The original Mega Drive game features six levels. Sega Channel subscribers could download Garfield: The Lost Levels, that featured 3 different levels.[3]

The Game Gear version includes eight levels, two of which appear in the Lost Levels. There is only one type of bonus stage (accessed by finding an icon of Arlene's face in each level), in which you try to wreck everything in Jon's living room within a time limit to get an extra life. Garfield does not have different outfits in each level, and the attacks are the same in all levels (his close-range is a punch, and the projectile are stones). There are no invincibility items. In the between-level segments, you do not take damage from the obstacles; instead, they teleport you back to the start of that segment.

On the PC, there is one new level, Alien Landscape, which was similar to one of the Sega Channel's Lost levels. The remaining levels are presented in a different order than on the Mega Drive.

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGameGEN: [4]
EGMGEN: 6/10[5]
Sega Saturn MagazineGEN: 67%[6]

Critical reception has been generally mixed. Reviewing the Genesis version, the four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly praised the graphics and animation, but all but one of them felt these were outweighed by the loose controls and large number of mandatory hits.[5] GamePro similarly commented that "colorful backgrounds and big sprites will charm cartoon lovers", but that Garfield's slow movement and weak moves make the game too frustrating. They concluded, "Fans of the comic strip might enjoy this platform title. The tedious gameplay and hopeless controls will disgruntle anyone else."[7] Sega Saturn Magazine (previously Sega Magazine) gave the Genesis version a 67%, criticizing the bland backgrounds and sluggish control and summarizing that "Once you've overcome the novelty of eliciting any movement from the world's most notorious sleep junkie, you're left with a fairly unoriginal platformer."[6]

In a retrospective review of the Genesis version, Allgame editor Brett Alan Weiss praised the "cute cartoon-like" graphics, furthermore stating "Odie, Jon, and the gang all look like themselves, and Garfield is as orange and as fat as ever", but described the game as "an average and unimaginative action game that's cute but not very funny".[4]

References

  1. Pettus, Sam; Munoz, David; Williams, Kevin; Barroso, Ivan; Chen, David (2013). Service Games: The Rise and Fall of SEGA: Enhanced Edition. p. 165. Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  2. 1 2 3 Weiss, Brett Alan. "Garfield: Caught in the Act - Overview". Allgame. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
  3. "Garfield: Caught in the Act on IMDb". Retrieved January 29, 2014.
  4. 1 2 Weiss, Brett Alan. "Garfield: Caught in the Act - Review". Allgame. Retrieved August 24, 2013.
  5. 1 2 "Review Crew: Garfield". Electronic Gaming Monthly (Ziff Davis) (76): 44. November 1995.
  6. 1 2 "Review: Garfield". Sega Saturn Magazine (2) (Emap International Limited). December 1995. p. 90.
  7. "ProReview: Garfield Caught in the Act". GamePro (IDG) (87): 88. December 1995.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, September 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.