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Imagine that you are little prince and that you have find your missing parents in publisher Taito and developer Hot B's kid and action game for the PlayStation 2 Graffiti Kingdom .
This kid game is basically a 3D modeling software with a simplified interface and an appealing story: An adventurous young prince, Pixel, is willing to rescue his parents with the help of his faithful "Box Dog" and a powerful magic wand. Later, he discovers that he has the power to bring anything he draws to life and, s imilar to another PlayStation 2 kid game, Graffiti Kingdom allows players to draw their own 3D characters and use them in combat with special abilities, powers, and attacks. Totting up, it lets you paint your way to success while mashing buttons PlayStation 2 buttons like a maniac.
Thanks to its gameplay, Graffiti Kingdom can be split into two categories: the create-a-monster, and the gameplay itself. With the PlayStation 2, the controls seem uncomfortable and clumsy at times, and the real-time combat has often an annoying oddity, such as being mobbed by five dirt creatures at once with minimal retaliation.
Graffiti Kingdom offers both a story and a simple vs. mode that allows players to pit their beasts against computerized or human-controlled opponents in a numbing battle of the thumbs.
Besides that, the look of the game is definitely charming. The stages are bright and colorful, with huge objects in vivid primary colors. The characters follow suit, and they range from giant rainbow-colored bears to police cars and even the Taito logo. The sound in Graffiti Kingdom is cutesy and appropriate. The characters are all fully voiced in all the story sequences. Like the rest of the sound in the game, the music isn't particularly good or bad.
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