BaccaratForums.com  

Baccarat Online Discussion Forums


Baccarat Forums
Advertise
Contact
online casinos
Latest Forum Topics

Go Back   BaccaratForums.com > Baccarat Forums Discussion > Shooting the Breeze

Notices

Shooting the Breeze This is where the action is for all people interested in anything baccarat related. Anything goes, seriously. Come meet and network with your peers, it's a fun way to take a break out of your busy day of posting at other boring forums.

Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old 08-21-2008, 05:08 PM
BaccaratForums Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Benin
Posts: 1
Default Road to Vegas: Nintendo DS Video Game Review

If Road to Vegas gets one thing absolutely spot on the money, it's a perfect imitation of the legendary gambling town Las Vegas. On the front of the box, it appears to be a glamourous world full of happiness, hotels and novelty-sized gambling equipment. But the second you step beyond the state boundary, that DS cart is full of crushed dreams, ruined lives, and standing alone on the freeway hitchhiking in your underwear. Welcome to Vegas. Don't stay too long.

The idea, ignoring the flimsy storyline, is that Road to Vegas is a light-hearted collection of mini-games that range from proper casino fare such as Poker and Baccarat through to old arcade enemies of the wallet like one-armed bandits and tiny plastic horse racing. Naturally, for any game involving gambling, they've tied it in with the world's most famous gambling venue, Las Vegas, and so you have a menu screen that's captained by a lady in a skimpy dress, and all of the money is in dollars. This seems fair enough at first, until you start the game and discover yourself in, of all places, Blackpool.

Yes, the game manages to crowbar in a story mode into what is essentially just a big ol' collection of mini-games. So you travel to Blackpool with five hundred dollars under your belt to start off your life of high-stakes gambling, fast cars and loose women. Only it's Blackpool, so you end up in a glorified Bingo hall full of drunks and some guy in a top hat and a cape.

There are three locations in total in the story mode, with Monaco and Las Vegas lying in wait for players who persevere through the money-making process to win tickets to fly out there, but they all amount to the same thing – a scrolling diorama of a room with lots of different games of chance or skill to be played for cash. Win enough cash, and progress through. Lose enough, and you're given another five hundred and put on your way.

It's simple enough, and these mini-games are varied sufficiently so you'll probably find one that you like the idea of. They all have three levels – Easy, Medium, Hard – which you select from before playing, and most have a cost to play. However, the difficulty levels usually only affect the chance of winning, rather than the difficulty, which makes many of the games even more frustrating than they already are.

And they are frustrating. Even in the starting venue, many of the games are hugely unbalanced in terms of risk versus reward. The Wheel of Fortune requires a $100 entry fee – that's a fifth of your starting wallet – and it's fantastically difficult to make money on. Other games, meanwhile, are slow-paced and offer very minimal gameplay. Bingo is a painstaking process of watching a slowly-changing number and ticking off a card on the touchscreen, and while it might be broadly the same as that in real life, that doesn't mean it's automatically a good idea to put into a game about the glamour of Vegas.

Even worse, there are some clear and obvious loopholes to the game's money-raising mechanic (see PG Tips for a quick walkthrough). Which means it's all quite easy to exploit the story mode and dance your way to Vegas, but only by defeating the entire point of the game.

Other parts of the game fare far better. The mini-games themselves are solidly designed, even with plinky-plonky music ticking away behind them, and a lot of them can be controlled quite satisfyingly via the touchscreen. The slot machines, for instance, can be activated with a quick swipe of the thumb down the screen, and most of the mini-game interfaces are designed with this sort of simple control in mind.

Road to Vegas also includes single-cart multiplayer, meaning that up to eight people can play together with just a single copy of the game. The multiplayer section doesn't offer every game as playable, but there's a couple of Poker variations – Five Card, and Texas - in there, and that alone makes it a good distraction.

But these can't solve the larger problem; that many of the games on offer should be fun but end up being impossible to play, either through difficulty or boredom. What happens in Vegas, so they say, stays in Vegas. If only this game had, too.

Reply With Quote
  #2  
Old 08-22-2008, 09:26 AM
BaccaratForums Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2008
Location: Uzbekistan
Posts: 1
Default

Maybe I'm crazy but I love this game!

Here are my personal tips for this Nintendo DS casino videogame:

  • So you've arrived in Blackpool. First things first – ignore any game that looks exciting. Just sit yourself down at Pillaging Pirates, put it onto Medium, and keep pulling the lever. It'll take you about two hours, but Pillaging Pirates seems to be the more forgiving of the first-round games. There are similar games in Monaco and Vegas.
  • Be aware that a lot of the games don't let you take home what you've won – they have fixed payouts, and instead your 'winnings' in the game itself are just points. Higher and Lower, for instance, won't pay out the hundreds of dollars you might be winning.
  • The slot machines won't pay out unless you pause the game and select 'Quit', so be sure to bank your winnings from time to time.
  • Advancement to later stages is completely fixed on how much money you have, so just focus on your bank balance and the rest follows.
  • Finally, don't forget that the house always wins…
Here's a snippit of the game text teaser:

Quote:
Thumbing its nose at concerns in this country about the increase of American-style casinos and gambling culture in general, Midas Interactive is all set to release Road to Vegas. After all, what better way to deal with the current credit crisis than by pouring your money into a game of chance?

Featuring 27 casino games ranging from the usual card games like poker and blackjack through to luck-based money eaters like roulette, you must chance your way from humble Blackpool to the tasteless glitz of Las Vegas.

If you fancy your luck, you can take on up to eight human opponents in the multiplayer mode. We'll be able to see what the deal is when it's released on July 4th.
Reply With Quote
Reply

Bookmarks

Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On
Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:31 AM.


Powered by vBulletin®
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Content Relevant URLs by vBSEO ©2008, Crawlability, Inc.