Book of Spells

Book of Spells

European cover art
Developer(s) SCE London Studio[1]
Publisher(s) SCE London Studio
Series Harry Potter
Platform(s) PlayStation 3
Release date(s)

‹See Tfd›

‹See Tfd›

  • AUS: 15 November 2012

‹See Tfd›

  • EU: 16 November 2012
Genre(s) Augmented reality
Mode(s) Single-player

Book of Spells (or Wonderbook: Book of Spells) is an augmented reality video game for the PlayStation 3. It was developed by SCE London Studio in conjunction with J. K. Rowling as a companion to the Harry Potter series. It was introduced at the Electronic Entertainment Expo in June 2012 and is the first release for the Wonderbook. It is based on Book of Spells, a fictional book by Miranda Goshawk released about 200 years from the event date. It was released in the United States on 13 November, 15 November in Australia, and 16 November in Europe.[3] The game received mostly positive reviews from critics, praising the use of augmented reality and the PlayStation Move, while criticizing the game's short length.

Gameplay

The user casts spells by drawing shapes with the PlayStation Move controller, while the book itself uses augmented reality technology to appear on screen via the PlayStation Eye. The Move controller itself appears on screen as a wand,[4] and may draw patterns on screen to launch spells.[5] Players are allowed to interact with elements appearing on screen, such as dragons.[6]

The game is designed to be an interpretation of learning spells at Hogwarts School in the Harry Potter universe,[7] with the "book" itself having been written in the Harry Potter universe over 200 years ago by Miranda Goshawk.[5] At the end of each chapter, a poem will describe a failed Hogwarts student in order to teach the user a lesson in the manner of Aesop's fables.[8]

At the start of the game, players choose one of the four Hogwarts houses, and one of three different wands. If, however, the player has a Pottermore account, they can link it to the game, in which case the in-game choices will reflect those they made on the site.

In addition to the specific spells covered by each chapter, the player is sometimes given the opportunity to briefly make use of other spells, such as the Oppugno Jinx. The player, however, does not actually learn the gestures for these spells and thus is not tested over this material.

Development

To develop the game the Sony Computer Entertainment team worked with Harry Potter author J. K. Rowling, who described it as "the closest a Muggle can come to a real spellbook".[4] Rowling had previously worked with Sony on her Pottermore website, and the company at one point had an exclusive contract to release Harry Potter e-books.[9] The game was launched as the first title for the Wonderbook on the PlayStation 3 at the 2012 Electronic Entertainment Expo.[4][10]

Reception

Book of Spells received mixed to positive reviews from game critics. It holds a 72 on Metacritic, indicating "Mixed or Average reviews." Critics praised the use of the Wonderbook technology by the use of both the PlayStation Move and augmented reality, while criticizing the game's short replay value.[11]

The Book of Spells was nominated for a BATA in the ‘Game Innovation 2013′ category.[12]

Sequel

Main article: Book of Potions

At the 2013 Electronic Entertainment Expo, a second Harry Potter-themed Wonderbook game was announced: Book of Potions.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.