Star Fox 64 3D review

Use the boost to chase... in 3D

GamesRadar+ Verdict

Pros

  • +

    Classic stages hold up well

  • +

    Graphical update looks great

  • +

    Still campy fun 14 years later

Cons

  • -

    Maintains original's shallowness

  • -

    $39.99 is the wrong price

  • -

    We get it Peppy

  • -

    we'll do a barrel roll!

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The N64’s biggest fault as a system was probably the fact that it had a very small library of games, with owners playing and replaying a new Nintendo release every four months or so with little else on the horizon. That's partially the reason Star Fox 64 is so well remembered by some: they played through it dozens of times because they had little else to do with the system. Now that the space-faring shooter has a 3D remake, it's time to see if the title was really worth the fan following it got, or if it got big mostly thanks to lack of competition.

Though Fox McCloud and his team of animalistic pilots have starred in other games since, none understood the core fun of Star Fox's gameplay like 64. While other titles messed around with on-foot adventures or touchscreen controls, Star Fox 64 keeps you in the ship, flying forward, blasting other statcraft to oblivion. SF64 is simple fun that any kid who ever ran around their living room with a toy X-Wing can appreciate. It's such an entertaining and easy formula, it makes it all the stranger that it has never been truly replicated until this remake.

Nintendo and Q Games did a pretty impressive job with this recreation, but that also means all the same old faults are there too, as Star Fox 64's largest issue remains: it's too shallow. Though it's fun for a few afternoons or a weekend, you'll "beat" SF64 3D in a few hours. Yes, with the multiple branching paths you'll have to go through it several times to see everything, but it’s still not that deep.

Perhaps we were able to speed through most of the stages pretty easily because we remembered the exact path to take to open up every possible route, but even if you have to work to find each new exit, you’ll have everything unlocked in, at most, nine hours. After that, the game gets old no matter how much replayability is packed into almost every classic stage. Yes, you can try to get a gold medal in every Score Attack version of a stage, but once you’ve finished Sector Z for the eighth time, it gets pretty rote.

Outside of a perfunctory multiplayer mode that’s cute so long as you have friends nearby with a 3DS (there’s no online play) , Star Fox 64 3D is a fine diversion, but at its full price of $39.99, it isn’t a must buy. Those looking for a blast from the past full of all the barrel rolls and Andross they loved 14 (!) years ago will have a good time for as long as it lasts, and this remains the best game in the Star Fox franchise. However, if you want to experience the purest expression of what makes Fox McCloud worth remembering, either rent it or wait for it to go on sale.

Sep 9, 2011

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Platform"3DS"
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Henry Gilbert

Henry Gilbert is a former GamesRadar+ Editor, having spent seven years at the site helping to navigate our readers through the PS3 and Xbox 360 generation. Henry is now following another passion of his besides video games, working as the producer and podcast cohost of the popular Talking Simpsons and What a Cartoon podcasts.