![]() None of the actors from the film reprise their roles here, but the sound-alikes the developers hired are not a bad substitute. Echoes of the film’s major themes are heard in the game’s various tracks, and they appropriately crescendo during the more dramatic moments. ![]() Gameloft doesn’t borrow nearly enough from Hans Zimmer’s superb soundtrack for the movie, but the music that’s there does an adequate job of making you feel like you’re playing as Nolan’s Batman, rather than a mere caricature of him. The menu design is surprisingly slick, as well, with a clean and stylish interface for the game’s “Tech Shop,” a hub for displaying all the upgrade options at your disposal. Textures look sharp and detailed, especially in the environment, where you’ll never come across the same building twice.īatman himself is chock-full of graphical nuance, and every single piece of his suit appears painstakingly rendered with the utmost care. So good that to the untrained eye, it might even look like something that belongs on a PlayStation 2. ![]() Impressive presentation for a mobile gameįrom the rain drops beating down on Batman’s suit to the impressive lighting and draw distance of Gotham City, TDKR is a good-looking mobile game. Let’s put our detective caps on and figure out what went wrong. ![]() It’s a shame it didn’t turn out so well, since Bruce Wayne’s alter ego is enjoying a positive resurgence in video games thanks to 2009’s Batman: Arkham Asylum and last year’s Batman: Arkham City, both of which British developer Rocksteady Studios made. The Gameloft-developed TDKR is the only game on the market based on this summer’s blockbuster film of the same name, the last of director Christopher Nolan’s critically and commercially lauded Batman trilogy. ![]()
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