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Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix - Review
System: PlayStation 3
Rated: E10+
Also On: DS · Game Boy Advance · PC · PlayStation 2 · PSP · Wii · Xbox 360
Shop: Rent This Game · Trade For It · Buy It Cheap · Get The Guide

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Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix is a game crafted for Potter fans. It assumes that you’re very familiar with Harry, his friends and enemies, and the storyline of the book or film. There are very few cutscenes in the game and those that are included do more to serve as bookmarks to let you know about where in the story you are than as a way to convey the story. If you’re one of the undoubtedly few people who haven’t read the book or seen the film, you’re sure to be hopelessly lost when it comes to the game’s story. Those of you intimately familiar with all things Potter are in for a treat, though.

The game dispenses with a rigid story-based structure to set you free to explore the Hogwarts School. From the Defense Against the Dark Arts tower down to Snape’s Potions classroom in the dungeon, from the Gryffindor common room out to Hagrid’s hut, the entire school has been recreated. There are plenty of sights to see, secrets to find, and mini games to play. The halls are filled with students and as they walk by you can hear them say hi to you (or just as likely insult you) or you can overhear them conversing with each other as you go past. It’s the most immersive representation of Harry’s world to date, and this alone will be enough to make many Potter fans quite happy with the game.

It wouldn’t be Harry Potter without any magic and The Order of the Phoenix puts a small assortment of spells into your hands. Casting spells is pretty easy – you pull your wand out and then move the right stick in various directions as if you were wiggling a wand. You’re not free to cast spells on anything you’d like; the interactive objects have all been predetermined by the game designers as well as which spells will work on them. A handy autotargeting button will lock on and cycle through the objects on which you can cast spells to make it easier to pick them out. I’ve played the game on several systems and I have to say the spell casting works the best on the PlayStation 3 - I didn’t encounter any of the target lock issues or spell casting problems that I ran into on other systems here.

While there are plenty of things to find and cast your magic on, not very much of it is all that challenging. Lighting every torch you see, pushing curtains aside to see what’s behind them, and other such activities won’t challenge many but the youngest of wizards out there. The story-based missions aren’t that challenging either, requiring you to do a lot of fetching of items or carry messages from one character to another. This isn’t the sort of game you play for the challenge; you really do need to be a big Potter fan to enjoy it.

The biggest disappointment I had with the game was with the wizard duels. A wizard duel should be an exciting event, with spells and counter spells being cast with furious abandon. In this game, though, they play out more like a mini game in which you spend most of your time shuffling from side to side to dodge spells while twirling the right stick to fire off your own spells. It’s not technically button mashing since you’re working the stick the whole time, but you can pretty much flick the stick around to fire spells off at random and still win all of the wizard duels.

The Order of the Phoenix is best left to loyal Potter fans and younger gamers. Those with only a passing interest in the film will probably get bored with it long before having to face He Who Must Not Be Named.

In The End, This Game Hath Been Rated: 82%. A treat for Harry Potter fans.



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