While I agree with some of Dale's gripes, I had a slightly more positive reaction
to Lammy. Many of my own initial complaints stemmed more from the start of the game, which seems to mirror PaRappa too closely. There's the same
Jet-Baby movie opening, the same bully starting trouble, and the first level also starts off with Chop Chop Onion rapping lyrics that are not
identical, but more than just familiar. I couldn't shake the feeling that perhaps the developers were trying to rehash more or less the same
material. Luckily, by the second stage, things start to pick up with a funk jam involving Lammy assisting a fireman extinguish a burning
building. The third stage progresses nicely with a classic rock-and-roll style song about trying to put a nursery of babies to sleep. But the
game doesn't reach its most original and high point until the fourth stage where Lammy pilots a 747 with a whacked out war veteran banging to
hard rocking, grunge-like tunes. Later numbers, including a vocal jazz one and a more standard pop-finale, are pretty good but don't stand out
nearly as much as the hard-rocking one.
The gameplay seemed to follow a similar uphill battle. Like Dale already mentioned, performing well in Lammy seems especially difficult
compared to PaRappa. Producing consistent results seems nearly impossible at times and the added
distortion effects and guitar bends only seem to downplay scores. With consistent playing and practicing (like the manual advises), I did
eventually produce better results. But after having to replay a few stages dozens upon dozens of times, I wasn't sure if I was enjoying the
experience or merely growing frustrated. Both Lammy and PaRappa are relatively easy and short games to complete in the traditional conquer-the-computer
sense, but at least PaRappa never wore me down with aggravation the way Lammy did.
Even with the above remarks, any game in this day and age that doesn't require blowing an opponent's head off for pure kicks deserves much
credit. Lammy makes for a very cute and likable protagonist (though I still prefer Parappa's lovable mug) and there are nice evolutionary
additions like two-player co-operative/competitive modes, performance replays, and even an uplifting playable reappearance by Parappa himself.
Lammy does contain many catchy songs on par with the original and retains the same level of musical understanding largely instilled by its
designer, Masaya Matsurra. So while some of the magic may be lost, there's still plenty of pixie dust to go around.
- Published August 30, 1999
Reader Second Opinions
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