Availability: Usually dispatched within 24 hours
Audience Rating: Suitable for 12 years and over
Binding: Video Game
Brand: Disney
EAN: 8717418107147
Label: Disney Interactive
Manufacturer: Disney Interactive
Manufacturer Maximum Age: 18 years
Manufacturer Minimum Age: 132 months
Platform: Sony PSP
Publisher: Disney Interactive
Release Date: November 16, 2006
Studio: Disney Interactive
Sales Rank: 2775
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Average Rating: 
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This is a wonderful game, one of the best on the PSP, i have owned my PSP from when it first came out and to be honest there has been a lot of very average games. But this game like most things is just such a simple idea but works beautifully, it is very well presented with nice graphics and user friendly interface. I have played this game for well over 100 hours and still cant put it down, this is what the PSP was designed for short bursts of gameplay which can be easily picked up, pick yourself up a copy you just cant go wrong ! 5 stars, thanks for reading.
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Here's the sequel to the brilliant sleeper hit puzzle game on the PSP. The premise is simple: line up same-coloured blocks in square shapes of four or more and link them together. A beam travels across the screen, wiping out any of these linked blocks so the trick is to get as many combos going before they are swept away. This time around the backgrounds are made up of music videos from the likes of Black Eyed Peas, Gwen Stefani and Chemical Brothers. This can be very distracting! Multi-player, a shape creating puzzle mode and Time-Attack are excellent for short bursts of play. If there is one criticism it's that there are few changes from the original game. Still, it's the best PSP puzzler by far.
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Lumines - another demonstration of how a simple concept, properly executed, can turn out an unbelievable game. Lumines 2 improves on it's previous incarnation by including music videos from famous artists, providing more challenges and tasks, and generally making the whole thing slightly more slicker.
For those not in the know, the challenge mode (where you'll spend most your time) has you dropping 2x2 blocks, tetris style, onto the playing area. The bloks are made of two colours in any combination. If you manage to create a 2x2 area or greater of the SAME colour, they will disappear when the time line sweeps past, earning you points. This sounds quite compliated to explain, but after a couple of goes it becomes quite intuative. ... Read More:
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If you liked Lumines, there's no real reason why you wouldn't like Lumines 2. The gameplay remains the same, rotate the blocks and build up chains of the same colour so that they disappear as the "refresh line" works it's way across the screen. It's simple but effective puzzler material, with no two games ending up the same.
Aside from game-sharing which allows a 2-player game without both players needing their own copy of the UMD, the big difference in Lumines 2 is the use of video on the backgrounds. A different video for each "skin" means there's plenty of variation and some are truly impressive. The first skin starts with rolling flames as a back-drop and will inspire gasps of amazement when you first play it. Progress through ... Read More:
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To use a terrible cliche I almost want to call this Lumines 1.5
The basic game mechanics are the same and I suppose they'd have to be otherwise it wouldn't really be Lumines! The idea being to match up the 2x2 blocks of two colours so you create 2x2 blocks of the same colour which get deleted by a bar that moves to the beat of the music. The special blocks allowing you to clear sick numbers of blocks by linking them up are still here too.
If you've played Lumines 1 all this will be perfectly familiar to you.
The main additions to the game are the music videos by well know artists such as Sugababes and Gwen Stefani that play in the background. This is a mixed blessing becasure you have to wait for the song to ... Read More:
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