- Rampage total destruction pc skin#
- Rampage total destruction pc full#
- Rampage total destruction pc code#
There may be more then one monster to unlock the secret ones. Use the monsters in the cities listed below to unlock the other monsters.
Rampage total destruction pc full#
Choose the same monster you finished the block with to start the next block with full health. Successfully complete a block, then select the "Change Monster" option. Successfully complete the game with the "Par Scores Met" award for all cities to unlock Philbert the Ungulate. Successfully complete the game with the "All Challenges Met" award for all cities to unlock Eyegore the Alien. Unlock the other 23 bonus monsters (for a total of 29) to unlock Bubba. If you do not destroy his car, no more police officers will arrive (excluding S.W.A.T. If a policeman is after you, lure him away from his vehicle and kill him (kick, eat, grab and jump, ground smash, etc.). Pick up a gasoline truck and throw it at a building to instantly destroy it. While the game is loading, press any button and the monster you selected will make funny noises. Note: This earns Destruction Complete Stars. Instant demo mode with two random monstersĮnter "874098" as a code. Note: The star points will not appear on their cards.Įnter "082864" as a code.
Rampage total destruction pc code#
Note: The effects of the codes will not be saved with your game.Įnter "271828" as a code to unlock all levels.Įnter "141421" as a code to unlock all levels and monsters.Įnter "011235" as a code to unlock all special abilities for all monsters. If you entered the code correctly, you will hear a sound. Then, enter one of the following codes to activate the corresponding cheat function. Gilman is immune to water leaks.Īt the main menu, press L2 + R2 to display the code entry screen. Water: Venus can drink water from pipe leaks. Kick the woman in the face to see the girl from The Exorcist.
Rampage total destruction pc skin#
For example, in Las Vegas by the large slot machine there is a "Beauty's Only Skin Deep" billboard. But the bottom line is that the core gameplay is tedious beyond belief - so much so that I doubt you'd even get value from renting it.Go to a billboard on a roof and kick it to change it to a funnier version. On paper, Rampage Total Destruction has a lot going for it: a vast menagerie of monsters to control, plenty of cities to destroy and complete arcade conversions of the original Rampage and Rampage World Tour available to unlock. It has a supremely basic control system that takes next to no advantage of the Wiimote short of the odd swipe or smash here and there, and graphically it's all very backward with no progressive scan or widescreen support.
The fact that Total Destruction is essentially a GameCube port doesn't help matters either. It's all extremely monotonous - distressing so, I'd imagine, if you'd paid GBP 20 for the game. Sure, powering-up your monster makes the job easier but the relentless pounding grows tiring within 15 minutes, no matter what power-ups the game may have, or what additional enemies are despatched to bring you down. Bringing a building down is all about climbing it, bashing it, watching it fall down, then moving onto the next. Unfortunately, the basics haven't changed since it first debuted in arcades in 1986. Finally, the game has made its way into the third dimension, with a limited amount of depth to the gameplay arena that essentially boils down to having additional rows of buildings to bring down before the curtain falls on each level. Secondly, the threat level has been upped considerably with bullets flying at you from all sides and far more military hardware on-screen causing bother. For a start there are 25 different monsters to unlock, each with a range of power-up abilities you earn by achieving different goals set on each level. Rampage Total Destruction tries to paper over the cracks with a bogglingly large array of enhancements to the core game. It's just a shame that the game ever left the arcades because the core concept of relentless, monotonous destruction simply never worked on the home consoles. Midway's original Rampage coin-op was a near-perfect concept for the mid-'80s arcade market - 20p bought you a few minutes' worth of monster-fuelled city destruction low on variety, high on enjoyment.