Testseek.co.uk have collected 51 expert reviews of the Dantes Inferno and the average rating is 71%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Dantes Inferno.
(71%)
51 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Users
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0 Reviews
Average score from owners of the product.
71010051
The editors liked
The gloriously repulsive visuals
Epic boss encounters and robust combo system
Plenty of T&A
If you like that sort of thing
Great graphics
Solid combat system
Fatastic art design
Well written story that intrigues players about Dante's past
Competent God of War clone
Some stunning set pieces
Imaginative art style
The editors didn't like
The repetitive action and often embarrassing misuse of boobs
Can be repetitive
Might be a little too purile for some tastes
Incredibly short with little replay value
Gaining experience is exceptionally grindworthy
Linearity makes the game nothing new or particularly special
If anything is guaranteed to cause a stir, it's when a game adds in what we like to call the 'shock factor'. For some games, it revolves around creating a heart-pumping and teeth-clenching experience, much like Dead Space. For others it's...
Presents a solid charcter action title that offers up plenty of fun button mashing.
It copies quite heavily from other charcter action titles inheriting those games issues in the process, while presenting its own unique issues with derrivative, trial and error based puzzles.
Dante’s Inferno is a well-made game from any mechanical standpoint. However, the depressing subject matter, occasionally annoying controls, and archaic reliance on quick time events turn what could have been an awesome game into just another God of War...
Abstract: Back in 1981, Atari sued Phillips. The latter had released a Pac-Man clone for the Odyssey 2 titled K.C. Munchkin, and Atari believed the game was similar enough that it infringed on their exclusive home rights to Pac-Man. The courts ruled in favor of ...
Abstract: When EA and Visceral Games announced a video game based on Dante Alighieri’s Divine Comedy, the entire gaming community was left scratching their heads. What on Earth could have inspired the studio to use a 14th Century epic poem as source material for...
Abstract: When EA announced that they would be publishing a video game adaptation of the fourteenth-century poem Inferno, there was some apprehension from gamers and fans of literature. Dante Alighieri’s story of a poet wandering through the nine circles of Hell...
Abstract: Nobody has actually read the whole of Inferno, though many Literature students keep a copy on their shelf to look clever. Dante Alighieri's fourteenth-century poem opens with Dante, a middle-age man, pondering his existence in a dark wood. Pretty borin...
Like I said before, I’m a huge sucker for blood, gore and a demonic storyline. That’s not to say I’m a fan of torture porn like Hostel or whatever… I appreciate thought and reason behind my twisted macabre. Not many videogames will inspire any of...