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Mixed or average reviews - based on 31 Critics What's this?

User Score

Mixed or average reviews- based on 18 Ratings

  • Summary: London 2012 - The Official Video Game of the Olympic Games will allow gamers to create their own moments of sporting history and fame by experiencing the thrill and adrenaline rush of the events and disciplines that will be a part of the London 2012 Olympic Games. With over 30 events in which to claim gold, players will enjoy more gameplay variety than ever before, even taking the race for medals online by competing for personal and national glory with online leaderboards. Expand
Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 31
  2. Negative: 1 out of 31
  1. Jul 28, 2012
    80
    Sega Studios Australia has surprised me with the depth and quality of their official London 2012 game. They seem to have really put their hearts into making it a great sports game and not just some easily forgotten mishmash, and they have succeeded with their goal.
  2. Jul 2, 2012
    71
    Is this the gold medal for Sega's Olympic venture? Not really, but it is definitely better than the Beijing predecessor.
  3. Jun 26, 2012
    40
    Very ordinary, even though it offers a rhythm-based gameplay with QTEs rather than the usual button mashing one, London 2012 is just another Olympic Games title without any brilliant ideas. It's not very pretty and not very well animated either. Its content isn't overwhelming either.

See all 31 Critic Reviews

Score distribution:
  1. Positive: 5 out of 6
  2. Negative: 0 out of 6
  1. Great game, It's kept me entertained for weeks and is doing a great job keeping me entertained until the release of Black Ops 2! ! !!!1!!1!!!!!!!!!!!! I've sometimes really felt like I was in the stadium and when I set a new world record I shed a tear when the 20 second clip of the national anthem blasted around my house. Expand
  2. "London 2012 Olympics" is a sports game, with Olympics theme, developed and produced by Sega. It supports normal controller and Kinect, and has a multiplayer of 1-4 players offline (local) and 1-8 players on Xbox Live. The game is based in the Summer Olympics, which will be headquartered in July / August in London. The game's graphics are great, and some of the most realistic I've seen in sports games: the general menus have a colorful style, consisting of simple and abstract drawings, with contrasting colors. In-game graphics, the details of the athletes are very well produced, and used motion-capture for each sport modalities presented, that shows several expressions from joy and enthusiasm, effort and even disappointment at losing a proof. Anatomical details like veins and muscles are all present, and the atmospheric sounds of the Olympic host is very well produced, so that looking, has the impression of watching the Olympics on TV: The game uses a colorful looks, with many lights, and supports a binocular 3D to enhance the realism. The same realism is transmitted in the replays, each looking like a replay of a professional broadcast. Each sports activity is faithfully represented, credible in the angles, as seen in TV and appearances can be defined within some pre-established for athletes from 36 different countries within each sport, and we can change their names. The audience in te games is very good, not like a legion of clones as we see in other sports games. Audio: The game has a simplified background music, but very adequate, consisting of pianos, violins and guitars, without being polluted. During the game, everything is narrated by sports narrators that comment, obviously with a British accent, and according to what is happening on screen. The other background sounds in the game are excelent, provided the voice of local announcers to the noises that athletes do and the crowd does, each with its depth perfectly suited the action (such as under water everything is muffled) . Contrary to the other category of games, Sega innovated in the use instead of speed and button-smashing, precision and timing controls in this game. Each activity has movement keys, which are made with simple combinations of the control buttons, added to the analog adjustments of angles, so that stands for perfection and training, as in real sports. For example, in the 100m, when the starting gun fires, you press the A to launch, after that, you press the A in rhythm, to keep an energy bar in a green region, which optimizes and gain runner's speed, and approaching the arrival you can increase the rate, for a sprint, and tilting the left analog up to place the trunk forward. In the ornamental jump, you choose between various jumps, with scores varying related to the difficulty, and press the button just in time to what is displayed on the screen, and when you are about to enter the water, you use the left analog down to dive straight with a light touch to the left to adjust the angle. The game also has support for Kinect in Party Play, and is a mode selected by Kinect in the Main Menu, including almost 20 different sports to play alone, or even four people. Kinect commands are also intuitive and responsive: the bow and arrow for example, requires that we take forward the left arm (holding the bow) and pull back from the right arm (pulling the arrow), thus you adjust the crosshairs on the screen, taking into account the strength and direction of wind and rises rapidly the left arm, releasing the arrow. As a side note: all the 49 events in 13 sports can be played with control, and Kinect exists in this specific Mode. The range of activities are great, ranging from the conventional athletics, going for archery, diving, and even more varied things, such as kayaking and table tennis. The game also features detailed statistics of activities, with their Records, and will accompany the trajectory of the country you choose, with a medal chart constantly updated. Summary: The game became for me the best Olympic sports game I played, having a great and realistic presentation, graphics and audio, plus intuitive and precise controls that make us want to play more often, to improve records, conveying a sense of being a professional athlete in the game. Adding to that the optional use of Kinect in varied activities, being responsive, the game becomes a game almost mandatory for anyone who is a fan of sports games - and it certainly deserves to be tested at least by those who sympathize with the subject, by the fun it provides. Expand
  3. Its another somewhat disappointing Olympics based videogame. One in a long line of average button precision/mashing games who fails to deliver anything new or extraordinary, and just does enough to masquerade as a legit enjoyable multiplayer game. I wonder why over the last 2 decades of olympic games across all console why some company hasnt poured the type of effort in a game like this the way its been done better in other party games. The presentation is good in some events, barely passable in others and the gameplay in the majority of the events feels generic. You might find a few events pleasing depending on your preferences, but even the ones you'll prefer have low replay value. Expand

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