The House of the Dead Overkill was released on the Wii in 2009. The 5th entry in the infamous rail shooter arcade mainstay franchise, this console exclusive diverged from its source material, creating a grindhouse aesthetic with ridiculous over the top characters, plot twists, and more swearing that even Grand Theft Auto is used to. Now in 2013 we have The Lost Reels for the iOS platform, where you take control of either Agent G or Isaac Washington as you blast through deleted scenes, gaining enough Kash to upgrade your weapons and try the whole thing over again.
The initial introduction to the control scheme is a little surprising. I thought that you'd be tapping zombies to fire, and perhaps swiping to reload. Nothing could be further from the truth (although there is an unlockable control scheme called 'tap frenzy' which I believe is exactly that)! How it works is that one hand moves the aiming reticle around like you're using a joystick, while the other hand is used to tap the fire, reload, and weapon change buttons. You can carry two weapons at a time, and swapping out is a great last resort if you have a zombie in your face and reloading is going to take too long (especially when you start off with your second weapon being a shotgun). Now it sounds like a control scheme like this would be terrible, but don't fret as it actually works pretty damn well, allowing head shots to be pulled off with relative ease. This is important too, and the amount of Kash you acquire at the end of a stage is tied to your ranking, and your ranking is partially tallied by keeping a combo multiplier going through fast and gruesome zombie execution.
The Kash (which at this point I should point out is not a misspelling) is used to upgrade your weapons' recoil, damage, ammo, rate of fire etc from bronze to gold stars, and also buy new weapons, upgrade your character, and buy game boosts. While the prices seem like they'll require grinding, you'll be able to upgrade one or two things after each level, and the upgrades do make a difference. The progression is a little slow, but not hampered by the game trying to get you to spend more money, well except for charging for the final scenario. Considering the cost of the app, this additional nickel and diming is unfortunate and a black mark against everything else it's trying to do.
With fantastic music, atmospheric visuals, and a whole host of secret goodies to discover through the levels (plus the fun of replaying levels with high powered death machines), every fan of rail shooters should consider adding this to their collection. It doesn't have the overall production value of the console original, but as a companion piece, it holds its own quite well.
(Appspy)
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