Developed and published by Ocean in 1991 Follow me on Twitter @ Get Great Retro Scene News @ Starting with the good stuff, presentation is great. The graphics, for the most part, are excellent, and the between-level vignettes presenting key moments of the film are very nicely drawn. Jonathan Dunn is on point with a title screen tune which, despite not being the actual movie score, certainly sounds appropriate. So, everything looks great, but how does it actually play? This is, after all, still a game, and a particularly expensive one, should you have been flush enough to have afforded the cartridge version; you'd definitely want a good slice of gameplay to justify the £20 price tag. Ocean stuck to the tried-and-tested formula for their movie tie-ins, creating a series of mini-games to represent key moments throughout the course of the film. There are one-on-one fighting sequences between the T-800 and T-1000, overhead driving sections, plus
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