Table of Contents

Plot
Gameplay
Development
Reception
References
External links

Looney Tunes: Back in Action (video game)

TitleLooney Tunes: Back in Action
Image
CaptionNorth American GameCube box art
DeveloperWarthog Games
ProducerLee Clare
Tim Coupe
WriterJay Lender
Micah Wright
Travis Ryan
ProgrammerKevin Ng
ArtistJohn Clarke
DesignerTravis Ryan
PublisherElectronic Arts
Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment
ReleasedGame Boy Advance
PlayStation 2
GameCube
GenrePlatform
ModesSingle-player
PlatformsPlayStation 2, Game Boy Advance, GameCube

Looney Tunes: Back in Action is a platform game developed by Warthog Games and co-published by Electronic Arts and Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment in 2003 for PlayStation 2, GameCube, and Game Boy Advance. It is based on the movie of the same name by Joe Dante. An Xbox version was also announced, which never released.

Plot

The game shares its plot with that of the movie. When a mystical gem called "The Blue Monkey Diamond" is stolen from Daffy Duck by the Acme Corporation, the Looney Tunes must set off on an adventure to get it back.

Gameplay

Las Vegas world (GameCube)

Gameplay involves playing as Bugs Bunny or Daffy Duck. Each character has their own unique special abilities and the game requires using both characters. Along the way, money is found all over the place, usually as coins and bills. Gold bars are also found but rarely. Coins are worth $5, bills are worth $50, and gold is worth $100. Some items are buried in the ground. The money is used to access any of 4 other regions in the game such as Vegas or Paris. Each character can take 3 hits. Upon the third hit, they return to the last checkpoint. There is an unlimited number of lives. Bugs Bunny has the special abilities of digging and double-jumping. Daffy Duck has the special abilities of fluttering and swimming. Bugs and Daffy must accomplish four to six challenges within each of five regions. The PlayStation 2 version includes bonus features such as the making of the game.

Development

The game was announced in January 2003, when Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment and Electronic Arts (through their EA Distribution subsidiary) announced a co-publishing deal for the game. It was the first video game directly published by Warner Bros. Interactive Entertainment themselves.

Reception

The game was met with mixed reviews upon release, except for the Game Boy Advance version, which received unfavorable reviews. GameRankings and Metacritic gave it respective scores of 49.38% and 47 out of 100 for the Game Boy Advance version;

58.77% and 51 out of 100 for the PlayStation 2 version; and 67.63% and 64 out of 100 for the GameCube version. Reviewing the PS2 version for X-Play, Skyler Miller gave the game a 2 out of 5, criticising the graphics, calling them "mediocre at best". They additionally thought the camera was difficult to use and concluded that "In the end, 'Looney Tunes: Back in Action' feels like a generic platformer with Looney Tunes characters pasted on top of it. All of the irreverent one-liners in the world can't save it, and neither can half-hearted appearances by supporting characters."

References


External links


Category:2003 video games
Category:3D platformers
Category:Action-adventure games
Category:Electronic Arts games
Category:Game Boy Advance games
Category:GameCube games
Category:Platformers
Category:PlayStation 2 games
Category:Single-player video games
Category:Video games based on Looney Tunes
Category:Video games developed in the United Kingdom
Category:Video games set in Africa
Category:Video games set in California
Category:Video games set in the Las Vegas Valley
Category:Video games set in Nevada
Category:Video games set in Paris
Category:Warthog Games games