And while it's entertaining--and crazy hard--there's just not enough in
Who Wants To Be A Millionaire? 3rd Edition to warrant purchasing the overpriced game. When the only real difference between this and the last version is the questions, you know that laurels are being rested on; unfortunately, gullible consumers are going to snap it up, despite the fact that they can get the same thing for half the price on the PC.
If you've ever seen the gameshow, you know just how this works; if you haven't, you're obviously not from 'round here. There's a series of questions, each more difficult than the last, each with four choices. You have three Lifelines that can help you out of a bind; one removes two wrong answers, one queries the 'audience', and one calls up a 'friend'. The last two are usually pretty useful, although the audience is wrong plenty enough; the Lifeline is nice whenever the person that Regis calls doesn't stall and not give an answer. 50/50 has a habit of eliminating the two you'd already eliminated, but it's good for a last-ditch effort.
And so the game goes. It's you versus the question-writers, and they start off easy enough but ramp off very, very rapidly. Indeed, I found the questions on here much more difficult than the ones on the show, at least from the start; it's frustrating when you can answer 90 percent of the ones on TV yet can barely get past the 5,000 dollar mark on your PSX.
Difficulty gripes aside, this version of the game just doesn't have much staying power. Sure, there are 700 questions, but divided up that's less than fifty games; considering the fact that many of the questions are 'top level' ones that you'll almost never see, chances are good that giving this game heavy play will have the questions repeat in no time. Considering the voice acting in the game isn't really geared towards the questions themselves, it's a shame; they could have fit a lot more on this disc without compromising the game's integrity.
There's a two-player mode, but it's pointless; Who Wants . . . is meant to be a single-player game, and taking turns is a much more sensible way of doing it than the pseudo-two player mode provided.
And while price isn't usually a factor, I was rather shocked when I looked it up and saw that this game is meant to retail for 40 dollars. Excuse me? The PlayStation is a dying system, and this game is nothing but a port of a PC version that retails for considerably cheaper. While I understand market dynamics, I feel a little dirty when I see Sony pricing something like this high, knowing that people are going to buy it.