The first picture is the earlier prototype, and uses the same display as the first Earthworm Jim game (and also shows a completely different Inflated Head sprite) the second is a later version and uses one with the number of lives and health percentage on the same line (and also shows an idle animation from the first game that was cut for EWJ2) the third is a picture from the final for comparison. The earliest versions are in Sega Power- a magazine notorious for using extremely poor quality screenshots- and two different prototypes appear in the same article! The only difference between them is the health and lives display Each of them have some minor yet interesting changes compared to the final product, including a lot of material cut from the game. I could go on and on for ages about the levels, there's so much to do, and no sign of boredom or repetitiveness creeping in at all." With extremely original, inventive, and entertaining levels, numerous surprises, excellent graphics, and smooth gameplay, Activision has done justice to Jim with a righteous conversion, with same mastery that ported Pitfall! a cartridge original to the PC.In the August issues of British publications Sega Power and Mean Machines Sega, three different prototype versions of Earthworm Jim 2 for the Mega Drive were previewed. Only the puppies are thrown faster and faster, and you start diving to try and catch them. You need to keep close behind him, keeping anything vaguely hostile out of his way, whipping him to make him jump, and so on.ĮWJ2 gets even better, with a bonus sequence, where you must bounce little puppies to safety, using a big cushion. Get him mad, and he'll turn into a snarling monster, and start taking bites out of Jim. Then, after yet more weirdness, Jim has to guide Peter Puppy to safety, across a number of traps. Jim ends up in Heck, Evil the Cat's domain, and is forced to outrun falling rocks, screaming meenies, and sometimes just plain run on the spot to get anywhere. Pretty soon after the first level, things get pretty weird. The levels themselves are inspired, although EWJ2's levels are just a tad better than 1's. The latter is unfeasibly large, and when used, clears the screen of baddies, and most of the foliage, too. Yuk! Plus, there's even more weapons, with a homing gun, a big laser, a completely useless bubble gun, and the awesome barn gun. Jim now has a backpack companion, Snott, who can be used either as a parachute, or as a swing to swing himself across mucus encrusted ledges. But do you really want to be stuck in the middle of a load of baddies, waiting for your gun to work again? Earthworm Jim 2 adds a little more to the formula. Jim's gun does drain energy, and recharges, given half a chance. There are the usual power ups to grab, such as plasma, or power ups. Or should the worst come to the worst, he can use his head like a helicopter to guide himself away from a particularly nasty fall. Then, there's his body, which can be used to whip monsters out of the way, or can be used to swing across hooks and ravines. Jim comes equipped with a big red gun, which he can fire in a number of directions, to dispatch any foe that comes his way. For a start, there's none of this monster squishing, or spin attacking in this game. Instead of taking its cure from Super Mario, or Sonic, EWJ is suitably original. Chris McMullen’s very thorough review for Games Domain describes what makes it a must-have: " EWJ gives a breath of fresh air to the whole platform genre. ![]() Like The Simpsons, Earthworm Jim (who was a lowly earthworm until he was one day accidentally given superhero powers) deftly walks the line between slapstick humor and social commentary-you could even call it subversive. ![]() What makes Earthworm Jim games a lot of fun is the excellent characterization of the hero. The game was so successful that it inspired a whole range of toys, as well as its own TV cartoon series. ![]() After successfully updating classic Atari cartridge game Pitfall! to the '90s with Pitfall: A Mayan Adventure, the first platform game for Windows 95, Activision next turned their excellent game engine to Earthworm Jim, a cult classic on the SNES and Megadrive console systems.Įarthworm Jim was the brainchild of talented folks who created Aladdin for Disney, and later formed Shiny Entertainment (who would later be much more famous for MDK).
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