![]() ![]() The audio is similarly understated but effective. ![]() However, Traume Center still has a nice sense of style to it, and the 3D surgery sequences feature just the right level of detail to make them a little unsettling or intimidating, without being gruesome. The game doesn't even allow you to run it in a widescreen progressive scan mode like most other Wii titles. There's a lot of intrigue to this story, and the dialogue is well written to drive it forward plausibly enough.Īll the anime artwork is nicely redrawn from the DS original and looks good, but from a graphical standpoint, Trauma Center: Second Opinion doesn't have any bells and whistles that couldn't have been found on, say, the Sega Dreamcast years ago. Meanwhile, a world-threatening epidemic is discovered and believed to be a work of bioterrorism. Stiles discovers he has the Healing Touch, an ability inherited from ancient Greek times. Nevertheless, the story is engrossing, and broaches some surprisingly intense and serious material, from patients with suicidal tendencies to doctors who are morally predisposed to euthanasia-and that's just the beginning. Stiles as the story's main character, but Trauma Center turns out to have a lot of great characters in it, even though all the story sequences are told in a simple, rather old-fashioned way, using still images and text dialogue. Derek Stiles, a young surgeon who is fresh from having completed his residency. Those who've played the first Trauma Center game will already know Dr. Now Playing: Trauma Center: Second Opinion Video Review By clicking 'enter', you agree to GameSpot's
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |