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Resident Evil Mercenaries 3D 3DS

3DS

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  • Age Rating: B 15

Product summary

Resident Evil The Mercenaries 3D delivers the intense Mercenaries gameplay experience on a handheld console.… See more

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Av. User Rating

  • Age Rating: B 15
Resident Evil Mercenaries 3D Product Details

Released on 04/07/2011

Resident Evil The Mercenaries 3D delivers the intense Mercenaries gameplay experience on a handheld console. Featuring re-mastered stages from Resident Evil 4 and Resident Evil 5, it’s a race against time as players try to defeat as many enemies as possible before the countdown reaches zero. The fast-paced, combat intensive action of Resident Evil The Mercenaries 3D is available both as a solo experience or gamers across the world can team up and enjoy two-player co-op via network play.

Gamers will have the opportunity to tackle the game’s missions with legendary Resident Evil characters from past and present. These include Chris Redfield, Krauser, Hunk and, making her debut in a Mercenaries game, Claire Redfield.

While the gameplay will be familiar to those who have previously played Mercenaries, changes have been implemented to the stages and characters have been transformed to full 3D, the addition of the ability to move and shoot adds new gameplay tactics, and the addition of touch screen functionality improves access to the inventory and game map.

Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D Features:

  • Fan favorite Resident Evil Mercenaries mode, in 3D and on a handheld for the first time
  • Fast-paced, combat-heavy Resident Evil action
  • 2 player co-op gameplay with Ad Hoc and Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection
  • Reworked missions from the original with new placement of enemies and objects
  • Choose from legendary past and present Resident Evil characters, including for the first time in Mercenaries, Claire Redfield
  • Once more into the breach

    You can't keep a good menace down, and so it is that Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D (3DS) sees Chris Redfield and a host of other Resident Evil buddies gun down hundreds more mutated monsters in this action-skewed spin-off from Capcom's evergreen horror series.

    Unhappily ever after

    Mercenaries first appeared as a bonus mode in Resident Evil 4, before returning in Resident Evil 5. This standalone 3DS version feels very much like a remix of the two. Maps are drawn from popular locations of the two previous games, while enemies – including some hulking brutes and a boss or two – will also be instantly familiar.

    Gameplay is simple. You pick one of eight characters (though only three are available at the start, and each has their own fixed weapon loadout) and then plunge into thirty against-the-clock missions where maximising your killstreaks and elongating the timer are your twin goals. The better your score, the higher your rank. Then it's on to the next challenge, even before you get a chance to catch your breath.

    If you've come for the sort of outlandish plotting and ghoulish creepiness that made Resident Evil famous, you're in for a disappointment. This is a purely arcade-style high-score game, with no storyline and no time for atmospherics. The monsters attack, and you keep plugging away until they're all dead. Simple as.

    In at the deep end

    The game starts with a series of short tutorial missions to ease you into the controls, but they're not really needed. Movement is on the thumbstick, while the right trigger aims your weapon. That's virtually all you need to know. The Y button does almost everything else, from pulling the trigger to collecting ammo to punching monsters in the face - depending on the context. It's really very easy to get stuck into.

    There are some more nuanced controls, such as an instant 180 degree spin for quick getaways and the chance to move (very slowly) with your gun drawn, but for the most part it's a shooting gallery. A very nice-looking shooting gallery, in gory 3D.

    This is the first truly 3D hardcore action game for the 3DS and Capcom has done a great job of showing just how much the effect can enhance the experience. Judging the distance to targets and surveying the area feels more alive and natural in 3D. The panic when a chainsaw-wielding foe gets too close is palpable. It can be distracting as well though, especially when coordination of the shoulder buttons nudges the screen out of the narrow focus zone, causing everything to go blurry - and right when you need clarity the most.

    Co-op carnage

    The game is at its best when played in two player co-op mode, either locally or online via a WiFi connection. Almost all missions are playable solo or with a partner, but some of the later challenges seem specifically tailored to the two player game. Connection issues are rare, and while the graphics start to wobble online the benefits of an extra pair of hands outweigh any technical compromises.

    With the ability to coordinate your defences, and pick characters with complementary weapon sets, it's simply more satisfying and exciting to throw yourself into the battle knowing that there's another human intelligence by your side. Once you've mastered the layouts of the maps, you can start pulling off more daring strategies in pursuit of an even higher score.

    The spice of (after)life

    If The Mercenaries has a weakness, it's that it doesn't really offer much more than was already unlocked in Resident Evils 4 and 5. You'll soon become familiar with the small number of maps, and while you can unlock new characters and skill badges, there's no way of knowing what you need to be doing in order to get them. There's a very short demo for Resident Evil: Revelations which lasts only a few minutes, and the main game's thirty missions won't last dedicated players more than a few days. After that, the game's lasting appeal will likely depend on how addicted you are to the leaderboards.

    There's also the restriction to a single save file, which means that everything you unlock, and every score you achieve is burned to the cartridge forever. There's no way to start over, so if you want to begin afresh you'll need to buy the game new. Conversely, if you'd rather get a head-start, picking up a pre-owned cartridge should give you more toys to play with, thanks to the previous owner.

    The Mercenaries is a beefy and satisfying action experience that will come as welcome relief to 3DS owners looking for something a little more bloody in their gaming diet. Only high-score chasers will want to stick with it for months, but everyone should give it a try - if only to see what a hardcore action game can do with handheld 3D.

    Gamestation Rating 8

    Double Oh:
    + Brutal, fast-paced action.
    + Online co-op works a treat.
    + Scratches that hardcore itch.

    Oh no:
    - Not enough variety.
    - Unlocks are opaque.
    - Only one save file, forever.

  • The Nintendo 3DS continues to pick up pace, following the blockbuster releases of Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time and Resident Evil: The Mercenaries. Today, Wednesday July 13th, sees the long awaited 3DS Video Service go live in Europe, offering a steady stream of 3D movie content direct to your console.

    Among the visual treats planned for the launch are the Aardman-esque cartoon series Oscar's Oasis and Magic Tricks, a series of optical illusions and conjuring stunts which use Nintendo's handheld to bamboozle friends and family, or maybe random strangers in the street if you fancy being the David Blaine of handheld gaming.

    More enticing for the future is the fact that Nintendo has already struck deals with Hollywood studios like Dreamworks to bring hit 3D movies to the console, as well as TV channels from Sky and Eurosport.

    The Nintendo 3DS is out now. Isn't it time you got one?

  • Nintendo and Capcom have announced that they will be teaming up to bring the eagerly awaited Resident Evil Revelations to Nintendo 3DS next January.

    The new handheld Resi instalment will return the iconic series to its slow-paced horror roots, as Jill Valentine and Chris Redfield investigate a bio-terrorism threat in Europe with sinister implications.

    Revelations will take players on an unsettling journey through mountains, coastal areas and to a deserted ocean liner, while also introducing two new characters, Parker Luciani and Jessica Sherawat.

    Players will be able to use the Touch Screen to quickly select items and solve puzzles as they fend off zombies and other monstrous foes, while an enhanced shooting system makes gunfights more responsive than ever.

    The game will also support the new slider pad add-on that is coming soon for Nintendo 3DS, providing gamers with an extra Circle Pad and two more shoulder buttons for greater ease of control.

    Fans have already had a chance to try out Resident Evil Revelations thanks to the inclusion of a playable demo with the recent Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D.

    Published: 07/10/2011


  • Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D on Nintendo 3DS

    Once more into the breach

    You can't keep a good menace down, and so it is that Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D (3DS) sees Chris Redfield and a host of other Resident Evil buddies gun down hundreds more mutated monsters in this action-skewed spin-off from Capcom's evergreen horror series.

    Unhappily ever after

    Mercenaries first appeared as a bonus mode in Resident Evil 4, before returning in Resident Evil 5. This standalone 3DS version feels very much like a remix of the two. Maps are drawn from popular locations of the two previous games, while enemies – including some hulking brutes and a boss or two – will also be instantly familiar.

    Gameplay is simple. You pick one of eight characters (though only three are available at the start, and each has their own fixed weapon loadout) and then plunge into thirty against-the-clock missions where maximising your killstreaks and elongating the timer are your twin goals. The better your score, the higher your rank. Then it's on to the next challenge, even before you get a chance to catch your breath.

    If you've come for the sort of outlandish plotting and ghoulish creepiness that made Resident Evil famous, you're in for a disappointment. This is a purely arcade-style high-score game, with no storyline and no time for atmospherics. The monsters attack, and you keep plugging away until they're all dead. Simple as.

    Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D on Nintendo 3DS

    In at the deep end

    The game starts with a series of short tutorial missions to ease you into the controls, but they're not really needed. Movement is on the thumbstick, while the right trigger aims your weapon. That's virtually all you need to know. The Y button does almost everything else, from pulling the trigger to collecting ammo to punching monsters in the face - depending on the context. It's really very easy to get stuck into.

    There are some more nuanced controls, such as an instant 180 degree spin for quick getaways and the chance to move (very slowly) with your gun drawn, but for the most part it's a shooting gallery. A very nice-looking shooting gallery, in gory 3D.

    This is the first truly 3D hardcore action game for the 3DS and Capcom has done a great job of showing just how much the effect can enhance the experience. Judging the distance to targets and surveying the area feels more alive and natural in 3D. The panic when a chainsaw-wielding foe gets too close is palpable. It can be distracting as well though, especially when coordination of the shoulder buttons nudges the screen out of the narrow focus zone, causing everything to go blurry - and right when you need clarity the most.

    Co-op carnage

    The game is at its best when played in two player co-op mode, either locally or online via a WiFi connection. Almost all missions are playable solo or with a partner, but some of the later challenges seem specifically tailored to the two player game. Connection issues are rare, and while the graphics start to wobble online the benefits of an extra pair of hands outweigh any technical compromises.

    With the ability to coordinate your defences, and pick characters with complementary weapon sets, it's simply more satisfying and exciting to throw yourself into the battle knowing that there's another human intelligence by your side. Once you've mastered the layouts of the maps, you can start pulling off more daring strategies in pursuit of an even higher score.

    Resident Evil: The Mercenaries 3D on Nintendo 3DS

    The spice of (after)life

    If The Mercenaries has a weakness, it's that it doesn't really offer much more than was already unlocked in Resident Evils 4 and 5. You'll soon become familiar with the small number of maps, and while you can unlock new characters and skill badges, there's no way of knowing what you need to be doing in order to get them. There's a very short demo for Resident Evil: Revelations which lasts only a few minutes, and the main game's thirty missions won't last dedicated players more than a few days. After that, the game's lasting appeal will likely depend on how addicted you are to the leaderboards.

    There's also the restriction to a single save file, which means that everything you unlock, and every score you achieve is burned to the cartridge forever. There's no way to start over, so if you want to begin afresh you'll need to buy the game new. Conversely, if you'd rather get a head-start, picking up a pre-owned cartridge should give you more toys to play with, thanks to the previous owner.

    The Mercenaries is a beefy and satisfying action experience that will come as welcome relief to 3DS owners looking for something a little more bloody in their gaming diet. Only high-score chasers will want to stick with it for months, but everyone should give it a try - if only to see what a hardcore action game can do with handheld 3D.

    GAME's Verdict:


    The Good


    • Brutal, fast-paced action.
    • Online co-op works a treat.
    • Scratches that hardcore itch.

    The Bad


    • Not enough variety.
    • Unlocks are opaque.
    • Only one save file, forever.

    Published: 06/07/2011

Resident Evil Mercenaries 3D User Reviews
Top review
Dominic
1 year ago
Resident Evil Mercenaries.
Its very good and very addictive, it was the first game i played on my 3DS.
Fanthasia
1 year ago
Capcom save seductions
this game is a promissing distraction from resident evil 4 and 5 and shows alot of promisses for the new redient evil title soon to be released however CAPCOM are no longer making there ds games user friendly by diminishing the ability to delete save game data. whether this is an attempt to stop preowned sales or whether it is a data problem i dont know but i do know that unfortunatly for those who buy preowned u will be dissapointed to learn that u will not be able to get your own achievements or unlockables as that will be done by a previous owner. although this is a downside to the game by capcom the gameplay and graphics are revolutionary for the ds franchise and get five stars for playablity and graphics 3D IS ON ITS WAY!!!!
Claire
1 year ago
Good installment
The game has scenes from resident evil 4 and 5 and addictive missions. It has internet play with strangers and friends which is helpful but can have faults during WiFi connection. The game offers lots of unlockables like weapons, characters, costumes and achievements to keep people aiming for something. Overall its a great game for fans but can be completed in a few days if given the effort.
Anthony
1 year ago
Not bad
Far from prefect, but great for short bursts and nice graphics. The save feature means you cannot delete you save date EVER, so it loses a star for that.
Sean
1 year ago
great but...
its great up to the point of a certain part of the game not as good a res evil 4 but better that 5
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