Testseek.com have collected 33 expert reviews of the Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood and the average rating is 68%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood.
(68%)
33 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Published: 2017-04-24, Author: Jonathan , review by: cheatcc.com
Abstract: Sonic and the SEGA crew have been given yet another genre within which to strut their stuff. Unlike the lackluster sports, pinball, and fighting games that have taken some of the sheen off the Sonic brand, Sonic and his pals seem to be quite at home in th...
Abstract: Its like the Sonic version of Justice League! Poor Sonic can’t get a break. Everyone’s favorite blue hedgehog hasn’t starred in a decent console game since the excellent Sonic Adventure for Dreamcast (later ported to the GameCube). Well, along comes ...
Abstract: We review an RPG made for a Nintendo gaming system that features a longtime mascot best known for his 8 and 16-bit platforming games -- and no, were not talking about Mario. It has been a rough couple of years for Sonic the Hedgehog. The one-time Seg...
Abstract: As a child, I absolutely adored Sonic the Hedgehog. He was cool, he was fast and his games were pioneering, alongside his arch rival Mario (who was a plumber, so it's not like he could be that cool anyway). The problem was as Sonic got older he turned ...
Abstract: Name: Sonic Chronicles: The Dark BrotherhoodGenre: RPGPlatform: Nintendo DSWhen Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood was first announced, my reaction was mixed. On the one hand, Sonic games in recent years have been less than stellar; in fact, I hadn...
Abstract: Sonic the Hedgehog might not be on the tip of your tongue when you think of role-playing games, but esteemed developer BioWare has blended the two in Sonic Chronicles: The Dark Brotherhood. Shallow fetch quests, an uninteresting plot, and a tiring batt...
Published: 2008-09-30, Author: Will , review by: gamespy.com
Impressive visuals; surprisingly engaging storyline; entertaining dialogue; tons of fan service.
Lots of backtracking for fetch quests; combat is a bit too simplistic; POW attacks get repetitive.
Is there anything BioWare cant do? The Edmonton-based developer burst onto the RPG scene with the classic Baldurs Gate, which kicked off a long and fruitful relationship between the company and Dungeons & Dragons fans. After further cutting its teeth...