Stick It To The Man borrows a page (no pun intended) from last year's PSP masterpiece Tearaway. This world is entirely built out of paper. Everything exists solely on a two-dimensional plane, and since the mechanics of the game have a lot to do with papercraft, it goes a long way in establishing the cohesiveness of the entire package. Apart from the paper aesthetic, Stick It To The Man could very easily be mistaken as another quirky, off-beat product of Tim Schafer's Double Fine Productions. Sure, these characters are human, but each and every one has some sort of outlandish physical eccentricity. And no, I won't spoil a single one of them. Every time you die, your body is reconstructed out of what looks like a stencil machine. And through it all is the purple, spaghetti-like psychic arm protruding from your head, which looks like one of those gooey, elastic hands we all used to play with as children.
Rounding out its confident visual presentation is a just about perfect soundtrack and voice acting of Saturday morning cartoon quality. Let's put it this way: how do you expect a seemingly well-learned pyromaniac to sound? Or an emphysematic clown who had his oxygen tank replaced by a helium tank? Not to mention the fact that in several cases, you can actually adjust the speed at which they speak. Even without the goofiness, the voice cast is absolutely perfect at selling their lines, which are more often than not utterly ludicrous.