Exit for the PSP – Game Info
Source: IGN
Exit is a new type of puzzle action game featuring a slick visual style with characters that appear as silhouettes and feature smooth motion-captured animation. You play as Mr. Esc, a professional rescuer, and must work your way through 100 stages to free stranded individuals.
As you work through the stages, you’ll have to deal with traps and puzzles, pushing crates into place in order to access new areas. You can make Mr. Esc. run and jump, leaping over pits that block your way. You’ll also have to make use of items, although Mr. Esc can only hold one item at a time. Free someone, and you’ll end up moving through the stage in pairs, gaining access to previously inaccessible areas.
Taito seems to be packing a lot of gameplay into Exit. The game’s stages will take place in a burning building, a hospital, a flooded underground shopping center and a cave — a total of ten themes split across the 100 areas. You’ll be able to use the PSP’s browser to download new stages. All stages are meant to be quick experiences, lasting between five and fifteen minutes.
Exit is currently 40% complete and is set for a Japanese release in December. The game will appear at the Tokyo Game Show later this week.
Source: IGN
Exit is a new type of puzzle action game featuring a slick visual style with characters that appear as silhouettes and feature smooth motion-captured animation. You play as Mr. Esc, a professional rescuer, and must work your way through 100 stages to free stranded individuals.
As you work through the stages, you’ll have to deal with traps and puzzles, pushing crates into place in order to access new areas. You can make Mr. Esc. run and jump, leaping over pits that block your way. You’ll also have to make use of items, although Mr. Esc can only hold one item at a time. Free someone, and you’ll end up moving through the stage in pairs, gaining access to previously inaccessible areas.
Taito seems to be packing a lot of gameplay into Exit. The game’s stages will take place in a burning building, a hospital, a flooded underground shopping center and a cave — a total of ten themes split across the 100 areas. You’ll be able to use the PSP’s browser to download new stages. All stages are meant to be quick experiences, lasting between five and fifteen minutes.
Exit is currently 40% complete and is set for a Japanese release in December. The game will appear at the Tokyo Game Show later this week.