Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee | 
enlarge | From: Microsoft Category: Video Games
List Price: $19.99 Buy New: $0.01 You Save: $19.98 (100%)
New (37) Used (60) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 138 reviews Sales Rank: 3214
Platform: Xbox ESRB: Teen Media: Video Game Autographed: No Memorabilia: No Batteries Included: No Age: 13 - 17 years Operating System: Xbox Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 0 x 0.1 x 0.1
MPN: 100730 UPC: 659556745240 EAN: 0659556745240 ASIN: B00005NZ1K
Release Date: December 3, 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Munch is a Gabbit, a race beingused for lung-transplants by the cigar-smoking Glukkons. Abe frees him, and now Abe&Munch are the unlikely saviors of Oddworld | | • | Munch will spend the first part of the game in a wheelchair, helping Abe solve puzzles and avoid capture by the Mudokons | | • | He'll do that through a a unique interface that allows him to control machines | | • | When he's all healed up, Munch will begin breeding&condition creatures in&around the ecosystem to handle certain tasks for him | | • | Save the Oddworld with the most unusual hero you've ever seen! |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee puts you in charge of Munch -- an unlikely hero, even for the Oddworld games!
Amazon.com Review Abe, the strange Mudokon, is back with his powers to possess enemies and lead other Mudokons. This time he's joined by a Gabbit named Munch, an amphibious creature that can communicate with Fuzzles and shoot electric beams. They are definitely two of the weirdest characters in gaming, but they ooze personality, partially because of their design and mainly because of the outstanding voice acting provided by Lorne Lanning, president of Oddworld Inhabitants. Although the characters are cute, in a peculiar way, the game's dark humor gives them an edge. Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee is primarily a puzzle game, with some action and adventure thrown in. The puzzles are great brainteasers that require players to use the special abilities of the two characters, know when to switch between them, and know when to guzzle performance-enhancing SoBe beverages. Several of the game's best puzzles get the player so caught up in their conventions that they overlook much simpler solutions. This curious world seems totally believable through the power of Xbox. The mountains, water, caves, and factories in this foreign world are extremely detailed and lifelike. The in-game cutscenes are comparable to Pixar movies. Although the Oddworld games for the PlayStation had spot-on personality and gameplay, the Xbox has truly brought the developers' visions to life. Oddworld Inhabitants has crafted a captivating experience that's imaginative, clever, and beautiful. Simply put, this is a must-have Xbox title. --Raymond M. Padilla Pros: - Unmatched uniqueness and personality
- Awe-striking cutscenes
- Addictive brainteasers
Cons: - Might not have enough action for impatient gamers
- Quite possibly, too strange for some
Amazon.com Product Description The power-packing Xbox hardware delivers the third Oddworld title in one of the most brilliantly realized settings to grace any gaming system. Blending unique gameplay, humorous characters and interactions, and the aforementioned graphics, Munch's Oddysee simply feels unlike any other game in the 2001 console gaming lineup. Players control two characters in the game: Munch, a wheelchair-bound hero, and Abe, a character some gamers will recognize from previous Oddworld games. Their goal is to find and free the Mudokon queen, keeper of the remaining eggs of an endangered species. Both characters feature unique talents that, via a tag-team style of play, propel the player through the game. For instance, Abe can climb and jump to reach new areas, as well as temporarily possess an enemy's soul via a chant. The web-footed Munch can swim to new areas and, when on the roll in his wheelchair, use his sonar plug to control machinery remotely. Saving an entire race also requires a coordinated effort on everyone's part. To get the job done quickly, players can deliver verbal commands to kinsmen. They'll gladly greet you (in a witty manner), then gang up on a mean-spirited enemy or accomplish difficult tasks for you. As with the rest of the game world, the finely detailed characters and environments, as well as a refreshing charm, draw you into an experience with the quality of a Pixar film. Prepare for gaming to get very odd indeed.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 133 more reviews...
Sounds made the game, without it.... May 30, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I recently purchased a 360, and had played Oddworld: Abe's Odyssey a while before. I thought this game would be good, especially with the "Platinum Hits" plastered on it. The gameplay changed drastically! Maybe because now it's in 3D, it seems less entertaining. And you run around collecting these weird fruits to access portals to free Mudokons. Worst part: SOUND. I don't know if it's because the 360, but when you tell your little friends to follow you, or let one rip, hard, YOU CAN'T HEAR ANYTHING! Even with the music turned down, and turning the volume up, you can barely hear anything. I stopped playing mid-first level.
Love it!!! April 24, 2008 Great game! Loved playing it on Playstation. It broke, replaced with XBOX, so to have the same game again is great! Graphics are great and I'm still learning to navigate, but I'm having a blast!
Why Not? April 22, 2007 This game is one of the best... and if you have kept up with the Oddworld games you must have this one in your collection.
Return of the Gabbits. January 9, 2007 MUNCH'S ODDYSEE is the first game in the Oddysee franchise that I have played. The first two games in the series were released on Playstation formats, but MUNCH'S ODDYSEE came out on X-Box and was one of the launch games of that system. I first played this game at a friend's house not long after it came out. I was fascinated by the amazing graphics and having different characters in the world literally follow the main characters around. It wasn't until recently, however, that I was able to get the game myself and play it all the way through.
MUNCH'S ODDYSEE is the third game in the Oddworld series. If you're like me and have never played any of the other games in the series, that's okay because there's a movie at the beginning of the game that explains Abe's adventures in the first two games and the connection between Abe's race, the Mudokon's, and Gabe's race, the Gabbits. Munch is the last living Gabbit, but is captured by the evil Vykkers, a race of creatures bent on domination, consumerism, industrialism, and environmental destruction. Munch is taken captive and one of the early levels of MUNCH'S ODDYSEE involves helping Munch escape from the Vykker's labs' ship. Once Abe and Munch meet up, the general storyline of the game involves getting back to the Vykker's Labs ship to rescue the egg crates full of Mudokon young and save the last can of Gabbit eggs in existence.
The graphics in the game are amazing. It feels and looks like you are playing a movie. This shouldn't come as a surprise because the Oddworld series was originally conceived as a set of films. However, the company, Oddworld Inhabitants, started making video games instead. Oddworld Inhabitants has gone back to their original plans and the first Oddworld movie is apparently in production.
As for game play, MUNCH'S ODDYSEE is simple enough that even most beginning gamers can play along fairly easily, yet the game has enough challenges to make it interesting enough for life-long gamers. The game is fun to play and appeals to children and young adults, but has enough humor and oddity to appeal that it appeals to older gamers, too. Now that I've experienced Oddworld, I'm looking forward to the cinematic tales Oddworld Inhabitants will bring.
Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee November 1, 2006 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
You can buy this for pc also, simply awesome graphics, very realistic, but corny at the same time. Depends on where your humor level is...and if the great graphics are enough for you. Gameplay, good for kids...not so much for adults.
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