

People who downloaded Typing of the Dead, The have also downloaded: Each mode also has multiple levels or options to choose from. There are also two modes designed to improve your typing skills. You can play through the game in either arcade or original mode, or just play boss battles.

Replay Value: An array of options gives the game high replay value. If typing isn't a chore for you then the gameplay can become somewhat addictive too. Sound: The game has good sound and music, but suffers from one of the worst voice acting jobs to ever be inflicted on a home computer.Įnjoyment: The gameplay is highly original and quite intense. Still, there are occasional moments when the game's special effects will impress you.
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Graphics: The arcade version of this game was two years old when the PC port was released, and the age shows in the graphics. And, you learn typing skills! Typing of the Dead may be based on a dumb idea, but it's an incredibly fun game nonetheless, with effective subtle, self-deprecating humor that adds a flourish to gameplay. Despite some localization flaws, the game is innovative and enjoyable, and should appeal to most anyone open-minded enough to give it a try. Like the arcade and Dreamcast versions, no mouse support is provided, limiting you to menu scrolling via the keyboard, as well as the Alt-F4 combo to quit the game. Voice clips not suffering from these problems are delivered deadpan, as if the voice actors are reading straight from a script. Some speech has emphasis on every single word, while in other instances, strange inflections give words different meanings than what was intended. Regardless of the phrasing, the voice acting is horrendous and couldn't have been worse had it been designed that way on purpose. Console gamers used to this type of phrasing won't be distracted, but some PC gamers not exposed to it may find it a bit disconcerting. Some phrases, however, like "I will destroy and hate all mankind," may seem a bit odd to native English speakers. The English subtitles make it obvious the game is from Japan, though there aren't any obvious spelling or grammatical flaws. Typing of the Dead has problems, though none that hamper gameplay. Most often you type relatively meaningless sentences, but at times the game elicits the occasional chuckle or two with its self-referential phrases, such as zombies saying, "I'm coming" or "I don't think you can win," or the thoughtful, "What was I going to say?" Intensity of gameplay is nicely contrasted by the game's humor. To damage one particular boss, you have to choose and type the correct answers to his questions. Here, defeating most bosses requires special methods, like typing away fireballs, or being able to use keystrokes only when the boss is vulnerable. Bosses may move faster, hit harder, and take more punishment, but are eventually dispatched the same as any moving target. Usually boss encounters in gun shooters tend to be prolonged versions of battles with regular enemies.

In House of the Dead 2, tension takes a backseat since gameplay is literally a one shot, hit or miss, affair.īoss meetings are more interesting because of the typing aspect. Your heart starts to pound as you desperately hunt for the last few keystrokes to complete a phrase before the boss comes near enough to kill you. The typing gameplay draws out the tension missing in House of the Dead 2, especially when dealing with bosses. Instead of shooting at zombies with a gun, though, you type them to death, which, in a strange way, makes the game more exciting than the original version. Typing of the Dead is essentially Sega's House of the Dead 2, a shooter released as an arcade game and then ported to the Dreamcast.
