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Killer 7 on GameCube (2005)

Killer 7 cover art

Average rating: 65%
474108121316920
3.5 stars out of 5
from 199 members
 
Certificate: Certificate: 18
Developers: CAPCOM
Format: GameCube
Number of players: 1
Released: 15/07/2007
Also Available on:  Also Available on: PS2

Brief synopsis of Killer 7

The name Killer 7 first surfaced back in the early days of the GameCube when Capcom famously pledged its Big Five games. The announcement was instrumental in promoting belief in the new Nintendo console throughout the industry. The GameCubes architecture differs fundamentally from that of the Xbox and PS2, and many feared that misgivings amongst third parties about the machines power would send the newborn console following in the Dreamcasts tragic footsteps. Capcom later redressed the widespread assumption that these five games would be Cube exclusives, asserting that it had never explicitly said any such thing, but by this time many publishers had already followed suit and the small purple boxs future started to look a lot rosier.

The Viewtiful Joe games, which eventually did indeed find their way onto PS2, are the most celebrated legacy of this series of events. Now perhaps the most eagerly awaited Capcom title finally finds its way onto Gamecube and PS2 towards the end of both systems lifespans.

The game follows the adventures of Harman Smith, a schizophrenic hitman with seven split personalities. An evil criminal mastermind, Kun Lan, has unleashed the dreadful Heavens Smile on an unsuspecting world. The violent and indiscriminately murderous beings come in several different forms and are characterised by their grisly grinning, rictus-like smiles. Harman acts as the go between for the so-called Smith Alliance, and the seven alternate personae within him each have differing skills and abilities, which the player will need to make full use of if they are to put a stop to Kun Lan. Garcian Smith is the psychic leader of the alliance, whose abilities include invisibility. Brute force is provided courtesy of Dan and Coyote, whilst Mask De Smith wears a mask and carries a grenade launcher. A girl, Kaede, rather terrifyingly spurts poisonous sprays of blood at her foes, Kevins speciality is the knife and Con Smith makes a superb scout, with sharp eyes and ears providing reconnaisance.

The game is directed by Gouichi Suda, of Grasshopper Manufacture fame, and has an extremely stylish and seductive look. Using cel-shaded graphics and environments, the game seems inspired in equal part by the traditions of film noire, western graphic novels, demonic anime and myriad horror films that feature some dark, alien monster. A shoot-em-up, the game is that increasingly rare thing: an all new, innovative IP with masterpiece aspirations, and as such is one of the more interesting gameplay experiences on offer in summer 2005.

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Members' Reviews

Reviews Voted Most Helpful

Rated - 3 starsUnique

Matt Sharp from London, England , 04/04/2006

This is a weird thing. After a stylish but pretty oblique cutscene and a quick tutorial, you are greeted with a pink gimp hanging from the ceiling on a wire telling you that you are in 'a tight spot'. This is the guy who explains the game to you, by saying things like: 'The thick blood is stored in the beaker. Give it to the doctor inside the television'. After a bit though, you start to work out what is going on and realise that all the abstract weirdness is just a bit of a mask for all the usual gaming conventions. There is absolutely nothing else like this however, and it's well worth a play if you're fed up with World War II Shooter 9 and Urban Gang Fighting: Los Angeles.

  5 out of 13 people found this review helpful

Read all reviews

Most Recent Reviews

Rated - 3 starsUnique

Matt Sharp from London, England , 04/04/2006

This is a weird thing. After a stylish but pretty oblique cutscene and a quick tutorial, you are greeted with a pink gimp hanging from the ceiling on a wire telling you that you are in 'a tight spot'. This is the guy who explains the game to you, by saying things like: 'The thick blood is stored in the beaker. Give it to the doctor inside the television'. After a bit though, you start to work out what is going on and realise that all the abstract weirdness is just a bit of a mask for all the usual gaming conventions. There is absolutely nothing else like this however, and it's well worth a play if you're fed up with World War II Shooter 9 and Urban Gang Fighting: Los Angeles.

  5 out of 13 people found this review helpful

Read all highest rated reviews