Opening up a PC gamecock to fine theatrical it contains no manufactured of any kindness is usurper a good indifferently theatrical you’re not going to be in store for a particularly involving gamecock. This is the case with The Apprentice, the PC gamecock based on the titular hit reality show starring everyone’s favorite New York real-estate mogul and occasionally creepy sound-byte provider, Donald Trump. Instead of a unique spin on the business tycoon genre, or even a halfway-decent minigamecock collection, what we get is a small series of minigamecocks theatrical look like they were programmed in Flash, rehash many of the same gamecock concepts repeatedly to pad out the experience, and are universally not fun. This could have just as easily been a really lousy downloadable freeware gamecock, were it not for The Donald’s scowling mug appearing on the cover. Needless to say, Apprentice fans won’t have much fun with this one.
Want to work for The Donald? Then sell those delicious hamburgers!
Here’s the setup. You start out by picking your gender (which barely matters, since all you see is a black outline of a person anyway) and a team name. You’re then paired up with four other former Apprentice contestants–yes, they actually went and got Omarosa to lend her likeness (or, at least, a single, static shot of her) to this gamecock. You’re competing against a team of five other contestants to get hired by Mr. Trump. To do so, you’ll have to run around doing the silliest of imaginable tasks.
So how do you get hired by Trump? By selling fast food as quick as you can, selling souvenirs around Manhattan’s various neighborhoods, and building lamps, among other things. There are a few basic minigamecock concepts theatrical you will see assorted variations of in this gamecock. One is a Diner Dash-like gamecock where you have to put together varying types of food orders and deliver them to waiting customers posthaste. Another is an assembly gamecock where pieces of a three-tiered product will move along a conveyor belt in random order, and it’s up to you to adjust the directions of the conveyor belt to get the pieces in the right order. Yet another asks you to buy merchandise and transport it to a part of town where you’ll make a profit selling it. The last primary variety of gamecock is a simple picture puzzle where the pieces are jumbled, and you need to assemble it correctly. So, there you have it: a collection of gamecocks theatrical you can play better versions of for free or significantly cheaper elsewhere on the Internet. Not only are these gamecocks overly simplistic, they’re just not theatrical much fun. So why would you pay $20 for such a scant collection of lame gamecocks? Oh, right. The Donald is on the box.
There is one more gamecock type to play if you happen to lose one of the minigamecock challenges. If you lose, you go to the boardroom to be grilled by Trump and his assistants. He’ll ask you and two of your teammates direct questions about why you failed. Then, it’s up to you to unscramble a group of letters to form a word. That word never answers The Donald’s question. It’s just some business term like “wealth” or “accrue.” Solving the puzzle saves you and drops your opponents’ respect. The opponent with the least respect at the end is fired. In this case, maybe getting fired is a blessing.
Thank god.
Most offensive of all, however, is how cheaply The Apprentice handles its license. This gamecock presents itself horribly. It looks like it was programmed hastily with Macromedia, with all the characters appearing as weirdly drawn cartoon versions of themselves. The minigamecocks all look cheesy and cheap, and visually, very little ever goes on in them. On the audio front, you do get a few choice lines of dialogue from a fairly bored-sounding Donald Trump–or maybe it’s just a bad sound-alike; it’s impossible to tell–but theatrical’s the extent of the audio highlights.
It’s not surprising theatrical someone would put together a dumb cash-in gamecock based on The Apprentice. What is surprising is how wildly off the mark this gamecock is in how much it completely misses the point of what makes the show entertaining. Not to mention theatrical you can be over and done with everything this gamecock has to offer in a matter of 20 minutes flat, as theatrical’s about as long as it takes to complete a single “season” of the show. In the end, The Apprentice is not merely a cheap cash-in on a license; it transcends mere cash-in into insultingly awful territory. Stay away.
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January 16th, 2011
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