Difference between revisions of "Wheel of Fortune (Rare games)"
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I don't care much for the game show, and I don't like game shows simulated as video games. I played these games just to better familiarize myself with the NES catalog of games, and add them to my list of games I've beaten. | I don't care much for the game show, and I don't like game shows simulated as video games. I played these games just to better familiarize myself with the NES catalog of games, and add them to my list of games I've beaten. | ||
Revision as of 15:28, 6 April 2020
The video game developer Rare produced three Wheel of Fortune games for publisher GameTek, each based on the Wheel of Fortune game show. The three titles were released on the NES from 1988-1990, and were essentially the same game, but with different puzzles. The three games include:
Released | Title | Notes |
---|---|---|
1988-09-?? | Wheel of Fortune | General puzzles. |
1989-10-?? | Wheel of Fortune: Junior Edition | Children's puzzles. |
1990-03-?? | Wheel of Fortune: Family Edition | Simple and hard puzzles mixed together. |
Contents
Personal
I don't care much for the game show, and I don't like game shows simulated as video games. I played these games just to better familiarize myself with the NES catalog of games, and add them to my list of games I've beaten.
Status
I do not own any of these games, but I have beat them all on easy difficulty.
Review
3 | 2 | 2 | 4 | 4 |
Best Version: NES
— This section contains spoilers! —
Good
- The games do an adequate job of representing the game show.
- Unlike a lot of video game tie-ins, the developers actually included the Wheel of Fortune theme song and sound effects from the show.
Bad
- The games don't accurately represent several aspects of the game show. For example, the Free Spin wedge doesn't have a dollar value, it isn't taken off the wheel when someone lands on it, and you can't guess a letter if you land on it, instead you have to spin again. Also, none of the values on the wheel change per round, and they top out at $1,000, and each game is fixed to 3 rounds.
- The user interface is poorly designed. All the letters of the alphabet are displayed in a single line which makes inputting letters slower than it needs to be, and, when solving a puzzle, you can't use the gamepad to backspace. Instead, you have to move to the back arrow character on screen, which is annoying.
- The wheel isn't nearly as colorful as it should be, and "Lose a Turn" is strangely changed to "Miss Turn."
- Unlike most game show video games of the time, you don't get to pick a player avatar.
Ugly
- The games are incredibly slow-paced. Most of the game is spent waiting for a clock to count down or watching the wheel spin.
- All three games are essentially identical, only with new puzzles and a slightly altered title screen. Very little effort was spent trying to update the quality of the game engine, graphics, or sound. Even the manuals are very similar.
Media
Box Art
Documentation
Link
- mobygames.com/game/wheel-of-fortune_ - MobyGames - Wheel of Fortune.
- mobygames.com/game/wheel-of-fortune-junior-edition - MobyGames - Wheel of Fortune: Junior Edition.
- mobygames.com/game/wheel-of-fortune-family-edition - MobyGames - Wheel of Fortune: Family Edition
- en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wheel_of_Fortune_video_games - Wikipedia - Wheel of Fortune Video Games.
- tcrf.net/Wheel_of_Fortune_(NES) - The Cutting Room Floor - Wheel of Fortune.
Categories:
- Video Game Rating - 3
- Video Game Graphics Rating - 2
- Video Game Sound Rating - 4
- Games
- Video Games
- 1988 Video Games
- 1989 Video Games
- 1990 Video Games
- Video Game Prime Order - Strategy, Action, Adventure
- Video Game Genre - Tie-In
- Game Mechanic - Playable Female Character
- Game Mechanic - Cheating AI
- NES Games
- Puzzle
- Game Shows
- Games I've Beaten