Teen Titans

  • Couch Co-Op: 4 Players
  • + Co-Op Campaign
Co-Op Casual Friday: Teen Titans
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Co-Op Casual Friday: Teen Titans

This past week, we received a tip about a game that had quite frankly slipped my mind: Teen Titans.  A previous-gen title, Teen Titans features four player drop in/drop out co-op throughout the entire story mode, with a nice variety of characters, teamwork attacks, and a heavy dose of the quirky humor that made the TV show it is based on a success.  All these various attributes make Teen Titans a fine choice for Co-Op Casual Friday.

If you aren't a total comic junkie, you might be wondering who the Teen Titans are.  Throughout the years in DC Comics, many heroes had sidekick counterparts: Batman and Robin, Flash and Kid Flash, Wonder Woman and Wonder Girl, green Arrow and Speedy, etc.  The sidekicks all got together and formed the Teen Titans, a sort of Justice League Junior, to fight the bad guys.  Back in the 80s, the Teen Titans group lineup changed drastically, introducing characters like Cyborg, a mechanically enhanced fighter, and Starfire, an alien princess with energy-based powers.  These New Teen Titans became very popular, and the comics were among the best sellers of the decade.  in 2003, an animated show based on these comics premiered, and it was quite good; the show had a manga-like visual style, offbeat sense of humor, and of course several decades of great stories to draw from. 

 

In 2006, as the cartoon's run drew to a close, Teen Titans was released for Gamecube, Xbox, and PS2.  The game was a brawler, similar to classic beat 'em ups like Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and The Simpsons.  The five main characters from the show were all available to play.  Robin is the team leader, agile, and trained in hand to hand combat.  Cyborg is a tough bruiser with a powerful arm cannon.  Raven summons shadowy strikes to great effect, while Starfire blasts enemies at a distance with deadly Starbolts.  Beast Boy is the most memorable, changing into all sorts of different animal forms as he fights the nasties.

The gameplay is hardly groundbreaking, but really, there hasn't been too much innovation in this genre since the good ol' days of the arcade.  Choosing from the five heroes, up to four people can team up to fight waves of enemies, defeat bosses, and otherwise advance the progress of the game.  Each character has melee and ranged attacks, plus a few combos to mix things up.  To the game's credit, each character plays quite a bit differently than the others.  Starfire does far more damage from across the screen than other Titans, for example.  Teamwork attacks are visually impressive and add immensely to the feeling of cooperation.




 

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