Something went wrong. Try again later
    Follow

    Beijing 2008: The Official Video Game of the Olympic Games

    Game » consists of 8 releases. Released Jun 27, 2008

    Sega and Eurocom's official Olympics game for the 2008 event in Beijing.

    vinchenzo's Beijing 2008: The Official Video Game of the Olympic Games (Xbox 360) review

    Avatar image for vinchenzo
    • Score:
    • vinchenzo wrote this review on .
    • 1 out of 1 Giant Bomb users found it helpful.
    • vinchenzo has written a total of 30 reviews. The last one was for Dead Space
    • This review received 2 comments

    In this day and age, the Track & Field formula is not acceptable.

    Pros
    • It'll make sure your controller is sturdy.

    Cons
    • It will also wear out your controller.
    • Mediocre graphics, bland gameplay, no substance.
    • Laggy online component.

    The reason I gave Beijing Olympics two stars is simple: it's not broken. Granted, it's repetitious, tedious, and boring; but not complete trash. (Cheers to you, Jumper!) I have not kept up with recent releases of the Olympics games, but knew they were not up to par. The main gameplay functions of this game revolve around a similar game that's about twenty years old, give or take a few years. You'll bash, mash, and stab yourself to the finish line.

    Problems arise when you first begin the game. You realize, without doubt, whatever you rented/bought was totally not worth the price of admission. Beijing 2008 is a simple game at it's core, split into different events: field, track, gymnastics, etc. Although each event is presented somewhat differently, your primary buttons are mostly the same. Usually you will gain speed through alternating A/B button presses, the triggers will commonly be associated with actions, and the analog and other face buttons will come into play occasionally, say, gymnastics for  context button presses.

    A couple modes are also thrown in for "variety." There is a Olympic mode where you go through 17 days of events, challenging you to consistently throw your controller into a wall. The problem is there are qualifiers, and while the save system is nice, it's frustrating to lose a mostly luck-based event and have to do the entire set of activities over again. Also present is a training mode, Decathlon (and the sort), as well as Competitive Mode [which is versus]. Probably the biggest godsend is that you can activate a tutorial at the beginning of each event in case you have never played it, or need a refresher.

    Graphically, the game is not impressive. Expectations aren't at a peak when looking at a game such as this, but standards are standards. The character models are of course different between countries, which is only a big factor when looking at Japan compared to America, per say. When it comes down to it, the character models are fine but the crowd, locations, and overall small touches are void of looking remotely more than a blob. Songs of the represented countries are in the game which is a nice touch, thankfully you can skip such scenes (let's be frank, you won't listen to it). Honestly, my favorite sound was the gun going off, what a fantastic sound. For anyone who did not catch that, when the sound of a gun at the beginning of a race is a winning factor, that means the rest of the sound sucks.

    That's about it. The story mode is basically the Olympics, 17 days of lackluster entertainment. There are probably 20+ events or so, but since they are so comparable it makes it all the more underwhelming. The online component works great, for the host, and if you are in the unfortunate spot of the guest have fun dodging Judo moves two seconds too late.

    They dropped the price below the average of $60, to an amazing deal of $50. Yet, this title would not be worthy of even a $30 price tag. For 400 MS points you could grab the same title off the marketplace with the same mechanics and a more nostalgic feel.

    Fun Facts
    • You will average 300 button presses per event.
    • You will also average 5 broken controllers per week.

    Other reviews for Beijing 2008: The Official Video Game of the Olympic Games (Xbox 360)

      At half a price, you might see it with a more positive look. 0

      As I visited today my local games store, among the known and shinny mega-hits of 2009, I caught with the tip of my eye "Beijing 2008" being offered at a bargain price. My immediate thought was "Who cares... I'm not going to buy a game that has such a bad reputation in the gamers’ community. And suddenly a crazy idea crossed my mind. What if I actually bought it? Nobody will have to know it... I approached the shelf and hold its case in my shaking hands, knowing that at this very moment I'm holdi...

      0 out of 0 found this review helpful.

      Officially boring! 0

      Beijing 2008: The Official Game PLATFORM (PS3, Xbox 360, PC)PUBLISHER (Sega)PRICE $50ESRB RATING (E for Everyone)PLAYERS (1-4, 8 online)   Like me, many of you have probably seen the Summer Olympics on TV and intently watched as athletes perform for the world. Unlike me, though, I hope you have been lucky enough to not buy the Beijing 2008 videogame.   Stubbornly stuck in game-play ages old, yet trying to be something new by mapping the  'mash the button' controls onto new style controllers, Bei...

      0 out of 0 found this review helpful.

    This edit will also create new pages on Giant Bomb for:

    Beware, you are proposing to add brand new pages to the wiki along with your edits. Make sure this is what you intended. This will likely increase the time it takes for your changes to go live.

    Comment and Save

    Until you earn 1000 points all your submissions need to be vetted by other Giant Bomb users. This process takes no more than a few hours and we'll send you an email once approved.