Legend of Spyro: A New Beginning
- Combat & Upgrade System allows increased potential and variety of moves & attacks
- Elemental upgradeable breath attacks (Earth, Fire, Ice, Electricity)
- Massive, long-range fury attacks
- Flurry of ground and aerial melee attacks and combos
- Non-stop, explosive action with a deeper combat experience & bone-chilling boss battles
Product Description
The Legend of Spyro™: A New Beginning explores the right origins of Spyro as you go aboard on a perilous, combat-driven quest that will bring you face to face with the Dark Master’s ultimate creation, Cynder. Experience the right potential of the purple dragon as you let loose devastating fury attacks, upgradeable breaths & ground to aerial melee combos in a frenzied battle with hordes of menacing enemies and bone-chilling bosses. It’s an epic and cinematic gameplay experience.
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Finally, there is a Spyro game that is as fun as the original trilogy. When Spyro went onto PS2, we saw the downfall with Penetrate the dragonfly and hero’s tail (I despised a hero’s tail). But this game is extremely fun, with splendid adventures, splendid voice cast. This game gets 5 stars from me!
Rating: 5 / 5
I agree with you!
Those Dumb metiors keep on comming and they really kill you.
I also agree with you about Tall Plains The best level of the game!
You Know what’s even cool I beat Cynder everytime I play the game!
The secret is you need to know which element to use and the type of breath
The largest Spyro Fan
Rating: 5 / 5
I do not yet have this game but reading the reviews it sounds exactly like the second game in the Legend of Spyro series. I am mainly reviewing to say that my opinion of Penetrate the Dragon hasn’t changed at all… give Insomniac the reigns to the Spyro series because they did it better. The original Spyro sports meeting (for the PS) are much better. I loved Spyro because of the collecting of gems, eggs and other items not for the fighting and that is exactly what Universal or whoever is making the sports meeting now has done is made into a long, continous, and therefore dull battle. All I can say is don’t dissipate your cash on the Spyro sports meeting for PS2, PS3 or the Wii.
Rating: 2 / 5
I ordered this game for my son for Christmas. Although the shipment was a LITTLE slower than I expected, it arrived WELL in time for Christmas, and in brilliant condition. I am VERY pleased and WILL use this seller again.
Rating: 4 / 5
Visually spectacular, this entry in the long-running Spyro series is probably the weakest in terms of play. There’s small that’s fun in this game. There is a very, VERY strong linear storyline…it’s nearly like Spyro: the Movie rather than a videogame. This game is not played; it’s WATCHED. You hardly ever have time to go from one place to the next when the game takes over and shows you what it wants to show you. Usually, the game stops just so you can sit there and watch new enemies assembling (yawn). Then at many, MANY other times it stops so you can watch and hear the fine vocal talents of Elijah Wood as a dull Spyro and (ugh!) David Spade doing his fascinating and (yawn) hilarious rendition of Sparx the Dragonfly. Wood plays Spyro against type; in previous sports meeting he was a scrappy small mischief maker. Here, he’s wide-eyed and insipid, his edginess dulled to nonexistence. Whenever you die and come back to life he limply says “It’s all right; we can try again!” Or he might say the equally limp “I guess I’d better try a small harder this time.” What kid is he trying to fool with dialogue like that? Since Spyro is no longer the comedian, all the “jokes” are given over to Sparx. In the previous sports meeting, Sparx was a silent character except for saying “BZZ BZZ BZZZZZ” all the time. Now, he’s just so dang amusing; omg I can’t believe David Spade was ever fired from Saturday Night Live. He’s just soooo amusing. No. That was sarcasm. In fact he comes across as the tiredest “comedian” in ages. Every one of the “jokes” cascade flat. Compared to other Spyro sports meeting, this one is sorely lacking in humor and unfortunately Spade is not the one to spice it up. (Yawn!) And the talents of Gary Oldman are wasted here as one of the grown-up dragons that Spyro encounters. This is an amazingly frustrating game to play owing to. All you do is wait, wait and wait. You wait for enemies to assemble, you wait for doors to open, you wait for Elijah Wood to shut up. Before the training rounds, you WAIT for the grown-up dragon to limp into the training area…thump…thump…thump, step after lumberous step. Then you WAIT for a giant statue of a dragon to descent into the floor. And you wait and wait and wait. And you do the training session, small realizing that most of the moves you will learn will be impossible to play during the course of the actual game. The linear nature of the game is so tight that any mention of the game being free roam is a lie. You are always quickly ushered from place to place. Doors close behind you, never to open again. You can never revisit previous played areas. The game forces you to go where it wants to go, and that’s the end of that. Plus there’s not anything to search for in this game. There are gems, and the gems have the novelty this time of having specific purposes, but other than that there’s no reason to look around and explore. It’s basically a very linear combat game. Although Spyro is constantly upgrading and becoming more powerful, it doesn’t matter because each enemy is defeated in pretty much the same way. There’s small necessary in terms of approach…Spyro just blasts away at the enemies until they die, gasping, in a grand explosion of gems. All the bosses are the same too–you just blast them and blast them until down they go. Even the final boss is as simple to blow away as the first boss. Boom! Down she goes. There are two flying sequences, but unlike the previous sports meeting, there’s no real objective there; all you do is glide away. There’s things to shoot at, but it doesn’t matter if you hit them or not. There’s a train chase sequence; when it starts, you reflect, oh boy, now it’s getting excellent. But again, it doesn’t matter a bit if you shoot the other train or not. It looks splendid, but there’s no reason to even play owing to that section. It’s moot. Then between each world, you’re mandatory to endure a training program which can’t be skipped; very, very dull if you’re playing the game more than once. But nobody’d want to. Again, you do not play this game, you watch it. And you’d only want to go owing to it again as often as you’d rewatch a dull movie. After the end credits, there’s a brainteaser for a sequel. Well they’d better make it a more fascinating game than this one! The Spyro sports meeting are noted for their hilarity, sense of marvel and exploration and replayability. This game has none of that. It does boast incredible graphics, but it’s probably one of the last of the PS2 sports meeting to be produced…by this time, they’ve gotten it right, and the colors, explosions, backgrounds, animation–all are terrific and it’s worth playing the game just to see them. But it’s still a dull game!
Rating: 3 / 5