Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition – A Retro Curse You’ll Happily Relive

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Review, The 1983 classic multi-room platformer Montezuma’s Revenge returns in 2.5D glory, and now Pedro’s adventure is bigger than ever with 100 tricky rooms to explore! For its 40th anniversary, what was once an unfinished game is now resurrected to match the full vision of creator Robert Jaeger. This time, you can choose between male and female explorers, Pedro or his sister Rosita, to delve deep into the dangerous ruins and hunt for treasures untold!

Montezuma's Revenge The 40th Anniversary Edition Review

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Review Pros:

  • Decent graphics.
  • 1.97GB Download size.
  • 1000 Gamerscore.
  • Two playable characters – Pedro and Rosita.
  • Three game difficulties – Apprentice, Expert, and Archaeologist.
  • Local leaderboards.
  • Director’s Cut lets you play the original 80s classic version of the game.
  • Action platformer gameplay.
  • How to Play option before starting to play.
  • Earn extra lives every 10,000 points.
  • Handy to save the game on the exit option.
  • The goal is to get to the top of the temple, and you do this by collecting keys to open up doors and avoiding enemies and obstacles.
  • Collect gems to earn bonus points.
  • Difficult game to master as it’s one-hit deaths, falling too far (which isn’t much), and dying.
  • A 2D game world with 3D characters in the world.
  • Nice soundtrack.
  • Simple controls with it being just movement and jump.
  • Basic puzzle elements will appear.
  • After losing all your lives, you can start again, or use continues.

Montezuma's Revenge The 40th Anniversary Edition Review

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Review Cons:

  • Cannot remap the controls for the controller.
  • Horrible delay when pressing the pause button.
  • The Fall distance is so small and causes many cheap deaths.
  • Had it where I respawned straight into death.
  • You don’t get any help in terms of how to play the game, as the instructions are way too basic.
  • The controls don’t feel that tight and responsive.
  • The background and obstacles all blend together, making it difficult to know what is an object and what is scenery.

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Montezuma's Revenge The 40th Anniversary Edition Review

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition:

Official website.

Developer: eastasiasoft, Normal Distribution, Handcrafted Mystical Games, Mission Critical Studios

Publisher: Eastasiasoft

Store Links –

Xbox

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Review

Jim Smale

Graphics
70%
Sound
70%
Accessibility
70%
Length
70%
Fun Factor
70%

Summary

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition The Thrills and Highlights of Gameplay Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition brings back the classic multi-room platformer with 100 tricky rooms to explore. You choose between Pedro and Rosita and work your way to the top of the temple by collecting keys, avoiding enemies and obstacles, and grabbing gems for bonus points. It uses a 2D world with 3D characters, simple movement and jump controls, basic puzzle elements, and one-hit deaths that make it a difficult game to master. You earn extra lives every 10000 points, can save on exit, and can start again, or use continues after losing all your lives. It also includes Steam achievements, local leaderboards, three difficulties, and a director’s cut that lets you play the original 80s version.

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition: Where It Falls Short Key Negatives Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition has a handful of issues that stand out. There are no actual graphics options, and you cannot remap the controls for the controller or keyboard. The mouse cursor stays on the screen, and there is a horrible delay when pressing the pause button. The fall distance is so small that it causes many cheap deaths, and there were moments where you respawned straight into death. The instructions are too basic, the controls do not feel tight or responsive, and the background and obstacles blend together, which makes it hard to know what is scenery and what is an object.

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Immersive Story and Narrative Elements. Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition focuses on exploring dangerous ruins and hunting for treasures untold. You take on the role of Pedro or Rosita as you delve deeper into the temple and push through room after room of hazards. The narrative is simple and built around progressing upward through the temple while surviving everything thrown at you.

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Visual and Performance Aspects Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition offers decent graphics with a nice soundtrack and a 2D world supported by 3D characters. It has graphics settings for resolution and supports keyboard and full controller input. However, the lack of graphics options, the pause delay, the cursor staying on screen, and the blending of backgrounds and obstacles all impact the overall feel and performance of the game.

Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition Overall Verdict: Is It Worth Playing?
Montezuma’s Revenge: The 40th Anniversary Edition brings back a classic with a bigger adventure and a lot of nostalgic charm. It has simple controls, a tough challenge, and a faithful recreation of the original experience. At the same time, the small fall distance, basic instructions, control issues, and visual blending can make it frustrating. It is a solid return for fans who want a difficult action platformer with a retro feel.
Back of the Box Quotes:

A tough and nostalgic climb through the temple in Montezuma’s Revenge:

70%

Jim Smale

Gaming since the Atari 2600, I enjoy the weirdness in games counting Densha De Go and RC De Go as my favourite titles of all time. I prefer gaming of old where buying games from a shop was a thing, Being social in person was a thing. Join me as I attempt to adapt to this new digital age!

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