Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project Guide

Since you can't officially Review delisted games, I'll leave my thoughts here. for Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project

Since you can’t officially Review delisted games, I’ll leave my thoughts here.

Overview

Turns out, you can’t actually use Steam’s official Review feature on any game that has been removed entirely from sale like Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project has, so I’ll leave my thoughts here instead.

Duke Nukem: Manhattan Project Review

(Originally written November 8th, 2019)

As a longtime avowed Duke Nukem fan myself, I was very interested in finally trying out this more obscure entry in the franchise, which returns gameplay to Duke’s roots as a 2D platformer.

The mechanics are basic 2D-in-a-3D-environment fare: Duke can move around the fully polygonal world along his single axis of movement as he traverses the familiar cityscape of the New York boroughs. A range of weapons are available to Duke – pistols, shotguns, his trusty rocket launcher – but unfortunately, the controls for using such, in addition to moving about the level and dodging enemy attacks does not seem intuitive or necessarily easily picked-up.

But for all those who will themselves on into learning the game’s controls – they will find themselves coming up against a new villain to the Duke canon – and like most of the previous entries to the franchise’s rogues gallery, it’s a cartoonishly evil mad scientist. This baddie’s goal is to drive New York into utter chaos by mutating the wildlife of Manhattan (roaches, rats, pigeons, sewer gators – that sort of thing) into a slavering army under his command. This mission of Duke’s to stop the nefarious ‘Mech Morphix’ fits into the usual Nukem mould of cheesy action quips, saving thankful eye-candy babes, and the bombastic blowing-up of mutant enemies in as gloriously gratuitous a way as a a 2002 sidescroller can possibly show.

Overall, it’s a worthy entry into Duke’s surprisingly extensive backcatalogue of run-and-gun platformers – and it’s worth checking out if you’re a fan of his, or if you just want to try out this unique little slice of slightly-schlocky action fun.

SteamSolo.com