Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix [X360]

Overall Score

3.5 stars - Click for rating criteria
Pros:
Captures the cinematic feel perfectly; Hogwarts is beautiful; Lots of well-conceived fan service
Cons:
Graphical slowdown; Plodding pace; Irritating story
  • Graphics 3.5 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Sound 5 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Gameplay 3 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Story 3 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Interface 4 stars - Click for rating criteria
  • Multiplayer 0 stars - Click for rating criteria

Order of the Phoenix brings all of Hogwarts to your console. Is it that blessing or a curse?

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By: Mike Smith

Its second greatest achievement is a technical one: Phoenix has no in-game loads. At all. Or, at any rate, none that you can see, which amounts to the same thing. Even the initial load, once you choose "New Game" from the title screen, is covered with a slick movie-style title animation. In strict "playing the movie" terms, Phoenix delivers.

This technical prowess, sadly, needs to be tempered with the reality that the graphics engine is not as smooth as it really should be. It stutters noticeably on regular occasions, especially in the larger or more special-effects heavy environments. Although it's impressive in scope, and has excellent character models, it's not technically impressive enough to stumble this much.

On the control front, the PS3 boasts use of the PS3's motion-sensitive system to cast spells, but you'll tire of it after a try or two. Using the gestures assigned to the right analog stick (which is the default) is far more accurate, and considerably less frustrating. Cleverly, the game switches out the standard set of spells (which mainly deal with lifting and moving objects) for offensive and defensive magic when you're in combat.

As you play, you'll find blue orbs that increase the power of your spells and unlock extra content found in a bonus room tucked away in an obscure corner of Hogwarts. Much of this involves video interviews with the movie's real stars -- it's yet another example of how Phoenix understands its audience and plays to them. Besides, they're often interesting: out of character, the actors have charisma their on-screen counterparts lack.

Phoenix and its stars, though, are all too often hampered by their source material. If you've not read the book, it's one of the series' weakest episodes, and sees the previously likable Potter descending into irritatingly juvenile outbursts of frustration and pointless venom. Much of this carries over into the game, and it's not welcome there either. Hardly the game's fault, to be sure, but it's there nevertheless.

Is Harry Potter a good game? No, not particularly. The story's vague and badly realized; the characters aren't especially likeable, and the tasks you're given are tedious and involve a lot of plodding about Hogwarts. But does it capture the feel of the franchise? Absolutely, and if you really get involved in the game you'll forgive it its flaws. For once, this is a video game adaptation the series' legion of fans should not miss.

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Posted: 25 Jun 2007

Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
  • Release: 26 Jun 2007
  • ESRB rating: E10+
  • Publisher: EA
  • Developer: EA
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Also Available: PC, GBA, DS, PS2, PS3, PSP, Wii

Screenshots

Harry Potter and the Order of the PhoenixHarry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix

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