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Alias

Mixed or average reviews
Based on 37 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 4 votes
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Game Info
Publisher: Acclaim
Developer: Acclaim Studios Cheltenham
Genre(s): Third-Person Action, Adventure
Players: 1
ESRB Rating: T (Teen)
Release Date: April 5, 2004
Summary
Alias is a third-person action adventure containing a unique blend of action and stealth that puts you under fire and under pressure. Whether you're up against the clock or being hunted by the enemy, fighting against the odds or fleeing for your life, the action is relentless. Utilize your incredible spyware and array of disguises to complete the most dangerous covert missions across the globe. Experience all the heart-stopping action and tension of the award winning TV series. [Acclaim]
Cheat Codes & Hints: Cheat Code Central
Also On The Web: CVG Interview GameSpy Preview Official Website
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
Times Online
The third-person game is faithfully realised, enhanced by a coherent adventure penned by the shows own scriptwriters and solid voice performances by the series cast members.
Read Full Review >Australian GamePro
Seasoned gamers will rarely have to attempt anything in Alias twice, yet the game still has quite a satisfying length to it.
Read Full Review >GamePro
Once you learn the controls, they respond sharply. The fully user-controlled camera can still leave you in a lurch, but locking onto one target in a group makes the frequent two-or three-enemy smackdowns winnable. [May 2004, p.70]
Read Full Review >Total Video Games
The variety with the games objects, as well in locations, aint half bad and that alongside some really plush graphics gives this almost instant appeal, which proves a point that some TV programs do transform into half decent games.
Read Full Review >GameZone
It's got many of the elements that made "Metal Gear Solid" a success, like voice-overs that are performed by real actors. That alone is going to have the hardcore crowd buzzing.
Read Full Review >Game Chronicles
While Sydney is certainly more enjoyable to look at than Sam Fisher or Solid Snake, the simplistic gameplay, lack of stealth, and TV-targeted visual style is likely to appeal only to fans of the show.
Read Full Review >Console Gameworld
At 8 to 10 hours of game play, it wont be the toughest challenge on the market, but its one of the best television/movie to video game adaptations you will find on the market.
Read Full Review >BonusStage
More experienced gamers whore used to intensely challenging stealth action games will probably give it the old stinkeye, but the game is worth a solid rental just because youll probably find yourself like me, with a grin on your face as youre playing through some of the missions.
Read Full Review >Next Level Gaming
Cool things like split-screen graphics and a true story give way to a somewhat dull fighting system and graphics that don't quite cut the mustard.
Read Full Review >Game Informer
Alias, in essence, boils down to an age-old sentence in the gaming review business: Fans will mostly dig it and newbies won't be terribly disappointed. [Apr 2004, p.94]
Read Full Review >IGN
Don't go in expecting great stealth or action of the quality found in EA's Bond games, but fans of the series will enjoy this one. It's pretty short, though, and can be finished in 10 hours without many difficulties.
Read Full Review >Team Xbox
Other than the split-screen camera, there are no aspects of Alias that havent been done before and better. The simple combat system can turn out some pretty cool fights, but there is no flow to the game with the constant interruptions from HQ and the multitude of save points.
Read Full Review >Play Magazine
A gorgeous game, painstakingly detailed and lit, and the deeper you go, the better it gets. [May 2004, p.52]
Xbox World Australia
Fans of the third person/action genre have seen everything that Alias has to offer before in the form of "Buffy" and "Indiana Jones" and except for the CIA/hi-tech storyline the game doesnt really present gamers with anything new.
Read Full Review >Game Power Australia
Disappointingly, preprogrammed machines is a fitting description for the thugs that supposedly threaten Sydney's life in Alias.
Read Full Review >Official Xbox Magazine
Level designs lack the magic of "Splinter Cell," the fighting and stealth can't compete with "Everything or Nothing," and the story follows its plot progression by the numbers. [June 2004, p.76]
WHAM! Gaming
Better than Dark Angel but not nearly as good as Buffy the Vampire Slayer, the TV-to-video-game treatment of Alias amounts to a fairly basic stealth-action title that's likely to appeal mainly to fans of the show and/or Jennifer Garner's digitized bum.
Read Full Review >Gamezilla!
Gaming fans will absolutely hate Alias, seeing through its nearly transparent plot and shoddy gameplay in an instant, but fans of the show will likely enjoy the chance to take on the roll of their favorite character even if its in a bad game.
Read Full Review >GameSpot
The core concepts found within the game are of a proven ilk, but the devil's in the details, as they say, and the sloppy execution of said concepts can't keep the game enjoyable for very long.
Read Full Review >Playboy
Although this game adaptation's take-down-the-arch-criminal plot is trite, the heroine looks so much like Garner - skintight guises and all - that we're ready to back her on recon missions and vicious fire-fights from Saudi Arabia to Hong Kong. [Feb 2004, p.32]
G4 TV
Alias is not a great game, but it's a solid stealth action title for fans of the TV show who have never played "Metal Gear Solid" or "Splinter Cell" and don't know any better.
Read Full Review >Frictionless Insight
The problem is that Alias should be a stealth/action game, and it ends up using action as a crutch to prop up a merely adequate stealth aspect.
Read Full Review >GameSpy
Unless you're predisposed to buying anything that is related to the show, just ogle a few gameplay videos, fancy a screenshot or two, and call it a day without wasting fifty bucks.
Read Full Review >Game Over Online
It's way too easy, its puzzles are so shallow as to be nonexistent (the "hacking" puzzle is almost embarrassing), it's got some pretty serious camera issues that could've been solved by anyone who's ever played a third-person action game before, and its stealth component simply isn't worth bothering with.
Read Full Review >Gamers' Temple
Alias is a game best suited for those who really, really want to play as Sydney Bristow.
Read Full Review >DailyGame
Unless you are a big fan of the show, in fact, a good portion of the story will be lost on you.
Read Full Review >eToychest
As a game it is well below the current bar that has been set by other titles in the stealth action genre, and even casual gamers will most likely be bored to tears with Sydney Bristow's exploits.
Read Full Review >Xbox Nation Magazine
If anything, this game sounds precisely like "Alias." Looking and sounding like the show isn't really enough, though. Alias also needs to offer thrilling gameplay...and, well, it doesn't.
Read Full Review >Electronic Gaming Monthly
Missions degrade into mindless, clunky combat, in which imprecise fisticuffs and useless, fragile weapons abound. Don't bother. [June 2004, p.92]
GMR Magazine
Stealth, ostensibly, should carry the game. It does not, simply because players are given little incentive to be stealthy. [June 2004, p.78]
GamerFeed
Alias the game almost grabbed my attention as well, but it just kept falling behind with too many gameplay flaws and not nearly enough innovation to stand in a league all its own.
Read Full Review >Armchair Empire
Obsessive fans of the show can at least play through for the storyline without tearing out too much hair. And with the extremely simplified gameplay, it seems to be made squarely for fans who don't play much video games. Everyone else can simply leave this on the shelf, with the quiet satisfaction that they haven't paid yet another game company for making yet another crappy game.
Read Full Review >Gamer.tv
It's just not very good...Missions are hamstrung by some sloppy ideas and a noticeable lack of playtesting.
Read Full Review >TotalGames.net
Development time for this title has clearly been organized as follows: 10% on gameplay, 10% on graphics and sounds, 40% on Sydney's arse and another 40% on her breasts - 0% on enemy AI.
Read Full Review >What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this game is 6.0 (out of 10) based on 4 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Gamegriller gave it a 5:
This is mediocre. It's only fun for about an hour or two, if you like the who, if you don't even less. Controls, moves, graphics are all mid-grade. Nothing special here folks.
Silent Rogue gave it a 9:
Alias crushes the Splinter Cells and Metal Gear Solids. I can already tell that Metal Gear Solid 3 doesn't have a prayer against this awesome stealth game. Buy it!!!
J. Wright gave it a 0:
This Game in not good at all compared to other stealth games. Fans of the sho will love it. But people like me who dont will chuck it in the bin like rubbish!
Sydney B. gave it a 10:
THis game is going to be the best! Who needs Sam or Solid anyway?
