Harry Potter and the Chamber of
Secrets
Words by Nam-Phuong Nguyen
Harry Potter and the Chamber of
Secrets, a game blending role-playing and adventure, is the sequel
to the game Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone, and based on
the famous children's books. One doesn't need to be familiar with
the first game, or even the books, and fans of the series will enjoy
being immersed in the world of Harry Potter while they wait for
the fifth book to come out in June.
The appeal of the game comes from
the books and movies and depends heavily on a player enjoying the
immersion in Hogwarts and the story. The atmosphere of the game
is its greatest strength, with rooms, layouts, furniture, and design
that seem lifted directly from the movies. For those who didn't
play the first game, the beginning challenge acts as a tutorial
and good design makes play straightforward.
The interface is single-player with
mainly a point and click format. Although the default settings involve
a two-button mouse, that can be changed in the control panel. Movement,
jumping, and spell casting can all be done with a mouse. It is so
simple that although Harry learns a variety of spells, the game
chooses spells for the player automatically with each specific circumstance.
This said, Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets would probably
not be challenging enough for serious gamers, but perfect for children,
occasional players, and fans of all ages.
The game takes place in Hogwarts
School of Magic and there is a central storyline that follows the
plot of the book with missions that Harry must accomplish. Also,
after learning each new spell, the player is taken to a challenge
level which involves moving through an area and finding objects
while stunning or destroying attackers such as Cornish pixies, prickly
pear plants, and fire shooting crabs. Most of the problems involve
moving blocks around or cutting planks down in order to facilitate
climbing or jumping on them. The challenges are more like playing
with puzzle blocks and figuring out how they go together than solving
problems related to social interaction. Aside from the central storyline,
there are a variety of side events such as playing Quidditch or
participating in duels, although even these events are very similar
in play to the main game. An interesting departure from point and
clicking is that one has to press arrows in sync with a scrolling
wand a la Dance, Dance Revolution. Secret rooms abound everywhere
in the game, and it is a fun challenge to find them all. Most are
not-so-secret looking.
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This is the type of game that is
fun to play through once, but will not get much play afterwards
because the challenges are always the same, and once the storyline
is finished, there is no incentive to go back, unless it is to find
all the secret rooms.
The best part of the game is the
rich environment. It is probably geared towards people who always
wanted to go to Hogwarts, but couldn't. Bertie Botts Every Flavor
Beans are used as currency, and it sounds like the developers got
some cast members to do voices for characters like Professor McGonagall,
Dumbledore, and Draco. Harry sounds a lot like Ron though. Fans
will enjoy seeing Gilderoy Lockhart, who actually is useful in the
game and teaches Harry a spell, as well as Dobby and Ginny. Video
interludes to move the storyline along abound, as well as video
introductions that act as tutorials for every new challenge. As
to be expected, for a game that depends so heavily on its environment,
the graphics can slow down movement and game play, but setting textures
or details lower should solve that problem.
Chamber of Secrets is a nice game
to breeze through while enjoying the graphics and environment, while
also noticing all the things that are similar and different from
the movie. It has a very easy learning curve, and is just challenging
enough to keep it from being too easy. Overall it is fun to play,
but would have very little playability after completing the game.
The real decision over whether or not to buy the game at list price
depends on how much you like the books and movies, although as said
before, the game can certainly be enjoyable without being familiar
with them.
It is rated E for everyone by the
ESRB but does have a warning for violence. The system requirements
are Mac OS 9.1 or later (9.2.2 recommended) or Mac OSX 10.1 or later,
G3/G4 CPU 350 Mhz or faster, 128 MB of RAM plus virtual memory (256MB
under OSX), and 3D graphics acceleration (minimum ATI Rage 128 with
16 MB VRAM). More information about Harry Potter and the Chamber
of Secrets can be found at distributor Aspyr Media's website at
www.aspyr.com,
where it retails for $39.95.
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