- The greatest wrestling game ever created! Tons of game modes, including Cage Match, Road to Wrestlemania, Create a PPV, and more! Create and bet WWF Championship belts with your friends. Over 50 of the top WWF superstars, more than any other WWF game! Thousands of signature moves, taunts, and mannerisms. New Create a Wrestler, with custom moves, costumes, and fighting styles!.
Product Description
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For those of you who've never even considered ordering a
pay-per-view wrestling event or are appalled by the of
steroid-fueled monster-men in a ring, this video game title is
not for you. Still here? Then get ready for more ferocious
virtual wrestling action, this time from WWF's corner of the
ring. Brought to you by the brutes behind the highly-accled
WCW/nWo Revenge (considered by many to be the best wrestling game
to date), WWF: Wrestlemania 2000 throws into the ring over 50
World Wrestling Federation stars, each boasting his favorite
moves and very distinct personality.
This one's got it all: awesome graphics, tons of characters and
special moves, plenty of match varieties, and special touches
like upgraded ring entrances. Pick a wrestler from the lineup or
create a wrestler from scratch, choosing his appearance, taunts,
and mannerisms. Then jump into the ring and show off your
character's signature moves--from X-Pac's bronco buster to
Chyna's "ooh-that's-gotta-hurt" low blow. With tag team, cage,
and weapons matches, the action gets downright wicked. Players
can even follow the Road to Wrestlemania, a story mode in which
wrestlers grapple with the reality of competing week after week
in special TV events in order to compete in the ultimate event,
Wrestlemania 2000. No doubt that this game could likely be the
champion of the ever-growing pack of wrestling titles. --Eric
Twelker
Review
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THQ has been making WCW-licensed wrestling games for years. But
a licensing shake-up has enabled the company to score the coveted
WWF license that Accl held for years. THQ has a tremendous
rtunity here to try something new with the license, and from
the looks of the company's upcoming PlayStation title, WWF
Smackdown, we may see something new yet. However, the company's
first product, WWF Wrestlemania 2000 for the N64, is little more
than a slightly upgraded version of WCW/NWO Revenge with a new
set of wrestlers. So wrestling fans who are waiting for an
all-new experience will have to keep on waiting. But WWF fans who
skipped THQ's WCW games purely because of its license will be in
for a game that plays well but captures only fleeting bits of the
"attitude" that makes the WWF so popular. Additions to the engine
include a sitting position for fallen enemies. You can pick
wrestlers up off the mat and place them in a sitting position, or
you can pick them up and put them on their feet. An in-depth
create-a-wrestler mode has been added. But unlike WWF Attitude,
the depth isn't found in how many different colors of pants you
can put on your wrestler or how many different types of mullets
you can slap onto your wrestler's head; rather, the draw here is
that you can customize every single move. Want up and the A
button from a weak grapple to be a backhand slap? Go for it. Want
your wrestler to finish other wrestlers with the "Insider's
Edge," a rip-off of Scott Hall's Outsider's Edge? It's all you. A
few other WCW finishers and taunts have made it into the game as
well, so you can slap Scott Steiner's or DDP's taunt onto your
wrestler if you so desire. Portions of the ring entrance walk are
also customizable, as are things like ring entrance attire (hats,
microphones, and water bottles are all available). You can set
who your wrestler's rivals are, whom he walks to the ring with,
how he reacts when and if he starts bleeding during a fight, and
lots more. Digitized music and stills from the superstars' video
packages pepper the ring entrances, but both manage to detract
from the experience rather than add to it. In theory, they make
the introsmuch closer to reality than WCW/NWO Revenge's weak
intros, but the quality of the entrance music is abysmal. Imagine
a friend calling you up and playing entrance music over the phone
- or perhaps a RealAudio file encoded at the lowest possible
setting - and you'll be on the right track. The entrance "video"
is similarly pathetic. It's a collage of still s taken from
the video intros, but the s are taken at a very low
resolution and blown up to fill the entire screen. It's a blocky,
pixilated mess. You would think the developers would have
splurged for a larger cart to make room for some higher-quality
audio and video in the game. At least the wrestlers actually
walking to the ring look better than those in Revenge did.
Wrestlers come down the aisle with their managers, valets, or
other companions. So, to answer the burning question, yes,
Godher comes to the ring with one of his hos. If you've played
Revenge, you already know exactly what to expect from
Wrestlemania 2000. The game still uses the same grapple system,
though it's a bit more reversal-friendly. The game is very easy
to pick up and learn, but it takes a sense of timing to excel at
the game. This makes it a wonderful multiplayer game. Playing
alone, you'll be able to embark on the Road to Wrestlemania, the
game's quest mode. Here, you'll pick a wrestler and his partner
and fight your way through various WWF television shows,
including Raw, Heat, and pay-per-views. You'll be booked into all
sorts of different matches, and if you seem to excel in tag-team
matches with your preselected partner, you'll be thrown into more
of those. Other modes include king of the ring, three-way match,
royal rumble, tag-team match, and cage match. Tossing the huge
cage into the mix causes a bit of slowdown, and the cage looks a
little strange up close, but it's still a welcome addition. You
can also create your own pay-per-view shows and belts. Belt
creation is a neat idea, but since the wrestlers never actually
wear the created belts, you're limited to looking at a
way-too-blurry picture of a belt before the match begins. Along
with from the previously mentioned terrible digitized ring
entrance music, the rest of the sound is really quite bad. The
weak MIDI tracks that made up Revenge's entire soundtrack have
returned, playing on menu screens and during matches. There's no
speech or commentary in the game whatsoever. The sounds of people
hitting each other and people bouncing off the mat sound pretty
good, but this goodness is overshadowed by the rest of the game's
weak sound. Graphically, the game improves upon Revenge, but the
models are still blocky, and the textures used for faces, while
more realistic than those in Revenge, just look weird. It's
really strange to see The Rock's face frozen in the
raised-eyebrow position while he wrestles. Also, most of the
wrestlers' heads are a little too square. The crowd is a
collection of flat, sign-waving lunatics that get extremely
tiresome after only a few minutes. WWF Wrestlemania 2000 does a
lot of things right. It's got some good gameplay, though it may
be a bit too simplistic for some. It improves on THQ's last N64
wrestling game by quite a lot, especially with the addition of a
good create-a-wrestler mode. But the terrible sound, only
passable graphics, and general lack of originality keep this
title from reaching greatness. This engine has delivered some
good games, but I think it's definitely time for an all-new
engine.--Jeff Gerstmann--Copyright © 1998 GameSpot Inc. All
rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or
medium without express written permission of GameSpot is
prohibited. -- GameSpot Review