Power Rangers Dino Thunder | |
Developer: | Pacific Coast Power & Light (GC, PS2) Natsume Co., Ltd. (GBA) |
Publisher: | THQ |
Composer: | Inon Zur |
Producer: | Don Traeger |
Series: | Power Rangers |
Genre: | Action-adventure |
Modes: | Single-player |
Platforms: | Game Boy Advance, GameCube, PlayStation 2 |
Power Rangers Dino Thunder is a 2004 action-adventure video game based on the television series of the same name, adapted from Bakuryƫ Sentai Abaranger. The game was developed by Natsume Co., Ltd. and Pacific Coast Power & Light and published by THQ for the Game Boy Advance, GameCube, and PlayStation 2.[1]
The Game Boy Advance version of Power Rangers Dino Thunder is a side-scrolling fighting game with puzzle-solving mini-missions. Five characters are featured in the game:
The player fights enemies as the three core rangers while meeting goals, such as finding and rescuing humans or defeating a number of monsters while the Black Ranger solves puzzles to free captured Zords. MegaZord battles also occur whenever an enemy enlarges to giant size. MegaZord levels allow the player to customize the ThunderSaurus MegaZord with auxiliary Zords obtained from the puzzle levels.
The game features 13 missions, played across 20 levels.[2]
The rangers pilot their Zords in various missions to save the world from Zeltrax.
Players take control of one of three Zords, Red TyrannoZord, Blue TriceraZord, or Yellow PteraZord in order to free the captive DinoZords (Violet CephalaZord, Green ParasaurZord, and Cyan DimetroZord), escort the Black BrachioZord to various warp points, and destroy alien weapon facilities. Also by collecting morphers, eggs, and crystal icons, players can unlock the zords from Power Rangers Wild Force (Red Lion Wildzord, Yellow Eagle Wildzord, Blue Shark Wildzord, Black Bison Wildzord, White Tiger Wildzord) and Power Rangers Ninja Storm (Hawkzord, Lionzord, Dolphinzord, Crimson Insectzord, Navy Beetlezord) as playable characters.
On Metacritic, each version of Power Rangers Dino Thunder has a 49 percent score, indicating "Generally unfavorable reviews".[3] [4] [5]
Juan Castro of IGN rated the PlayStation 2 version 4.5 out of 10.[6]