Rampage World Tour Review

Unless you were a freak for the original game, you'll tire of RWT very quickly.

Rampage World Tour is a 1997 update to the 1986 arcade classic, Rampage. Not a whole lot has changed in the 11 years between the two games. Sure, the graphics are better and the levels are larger, but at its core, World Tour is still the same old game. You still pick one of three monsters and blow up every building in sight. The only real difference is that this time there's a bit of a storyline attached to the madness.

The game gets under way with the three characters being mutated into large monsters. Angry at the company that's producing this mutating goo, the monsters set out to destroy everything in their paths in hopes of destroying all the plants making this radioactive muck around the world. A slim story, yes, but more than enough for a game like Rampage.

The graphics in Rampage World Tour are, of course, better than the original Rampage, yet they maintain the same look and feel. The game's sound (mostly explosions, air-raid sirens, and the like) also fits really well. The translation is nearly identical to the arcade version of World Tour.

The gameplay also sticks to the original, although now your monster can kick, which makes destroying buildings and ground vehicles much easier. Perhaps even a bit too easy. And there are lots of new little tricks in the game, like bouncing off buildings, jumping onto planes, and more. The levels are now much bigger, and if you take too long, the citizens evacuate the town and call in the national guard.

If you enjoyed Rampage in any of its previous incarnations, Rampage World Tour is probably worth picking up, but the game is incredibly repetitive and stupidly simple. Unless you were a freak for the original game, you'll tire of RWT very quickly.

The Good

  • N/A

The Bad

About the Author

Jeff Gerstmann has been professionally covering the video game industry since 1994.