Product description
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Disc with case. Missing the instruction manual but has back art
on case. This is my personal copy, just clearing out my game
library. Tested, clean, works great!
.com
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This entirely unique and thoroughly entertaining game,
co-developed in Japan and the U.S., features a hip-hop puppy
animated in a whimsical, paper-thin style. PaRappa hopes to win
the heart of Sunny, the object of his affection, by holding his
own with an increasingly adept group of rap masters.
Players control PaRappa by rhythmically pressing the
controller's buttons to repeat bits of rap songs in the proper
order. The tunes and lyrics are catchy and clever, and the
gameplay is completely original. Suitable for children and
appealing to adults, this is a must-have disc for PlayStation
owners who want to smile. Woven into the storyline are positive
messages about self-confidence and respect. Highly skilled
players can try their hand at free-form rapping to gain extra
points. While this game has inspired sequels and copycats, it
still holds up against the test of time. --Jeff Young
Pros:
* Lighthearted, zany graphics
* Clever songs and positive messages for children
Cons:* Can be frustrating for those without rhythm
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Review
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Once in a while, a company takes a risk and designs something
unlike anything seen before. In video gaming's early days, it
happened with almost every other game released. By the 8-bit era,
originality was something to look for but not expect with any
great regularity. Today, unless you deem 3D versions of old games
to be "new," it's been some time since an original idea appeared.
But even with a monthly average of 30 games being released, it's
a testament to unique design that PaRappa the Rapper, an
underpromoted release by Sony of Japan, became a top seller in
the Japanese market.
PaRappa the Rapper is an interactive cartoon about a shy puppy
named (oddly enough) PaRappa, who has a crush on the beautiful
Sunny but doesn't know if he has the courage or power to impress
her. Armed with the motto "I gotta believe!" and prodigious
rapping skills, PaRappa sets about to get the girl in a world of
animated characters, 3D backgrounds, and English-language voices.
And despite the fact that no one gets decapitated, the game's
still fun.
The premise unfolds bizarrely: Level one begins with an
onion-headed karate master rapping in a dojo; you respond to the
teacher's simple rap by quickly pressing controller buttons to
match the onscreen cues and rhythm of the song. To complete the
stage, you'll watch for the cued phrases and repeat them with the
indicated buttons. In between raps, the teacher "drops
knowledge," giving you a quick breather before moving on to more
complicated patterns and harder stages.
Each of the game's four teachers specializes in a distinctive rap
style, so you'll learn to kick it in reggae, house, pop, and "old
school" during the game. (No, there's no "gangsta rap" level, so
parents needn't fear little Johnny running up on the one-time
with a sawed-off , killing 40s, or sparking blunts.) The
levels that follow have you rap with a female moose driving
instructor in a car, learn about the flea market from a
Rastafarian frog, and bake a cake with a nasty-voiced chicken.
After eating the cake and driving Sunny home, PaRappa goes up
against his teachers in a race to see which rap master can use a
one-seater station bathroom. Post-, it's time to drop
"phat" rhymes for an audience and flex a little lyrical muscle.
Once you've completed each stage with stringent button-tapping,
you can go back and show off. If you really strut your stuff,
your teacher goes completely ape and destroys or abandons the
screen while you freestyle. If you do that, you earn a crown for
completing the stage.
While the gameplay is original, it's not going to win awards from
fans of intense fighting and first-person racing games. The
graphics and audio, however, just might: All of PaRappa's
characters are comically animated paper dolls moving against
colorful 3D backdrops, a simplistic and charming visual design
that never would have worked but for the game's theme and some
brilliant camera motion. While you're playing, you can barely
focus on the graphics while watching the top of the screen for
appropriate joypad commands, and when watching other people play,
you're entirely drawn to the continuous background movement. The
music is clear, catchy, and funny, and the voice samples
memorable. Prerendered cutscenes provide continuity for the
storyline between levels, and the opening is one of the weirdest
in recent memory. Also of note, the rapping is surprisingly
credible - there isn't a wack MC in the bunch (although even
skilled PaRappers will find their delivery occasionally
stuttered).
PaRappa is undeniably cute and hip - the ideal PlayStation mascot
in that he's so universally acceptable and nonthreatening. Many
have purchased PlayStations solely on the basis of seeing
PaRappa, justifying their purchases as toys their families could
enjoy. For the record, chicks dig PaRappa too, so if having a
cute game means you can convince your otherwise game-loathing
girlfriend to pick up a controller, "it's all good." --Jer
Horwitz
--Copyright ©1999 GameSpot Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction
in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written
permission of GameSpot is prohibited. GameSpot and the GameSpot
logo are trademarks of GameSpot Inc. -- GameSpot Review
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- Disc(s) plus hard plastic protective replacement case only. Disc condition ranges from flawless to scratched but is guaranteed to work..