Common Sense Media Review
By Paul Semel , based on child development research. How do we rate?
Violent arcade version of a classic shooting game.
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Mighty Doom
Parent and Kid Reviews
Based on 3 parent reviews
What’s It About?
In MIGHTY DOOM, the Doom Slayer from the Doom games is now the Mini Slayer, and while he may be cartoonishly cute, he's just as deadly when he faced with an onslaught of demonic creatures. Good thing he's heavily armed, since he has to face attack from all sides while clearing out the rectangular battlefields in this old school arcade-style shooters.
Is It Any Good?
Despite what you might expect, this somewhat cute mobile version of the violent shooter series Doom is as exciting and bloody good as its predecessors. In Mighty Doom, the Doom Slayer from the classic first-person shooter series is now the Mini Slayer, a cute soldier who fights the same kind of demonic creatures of the bigger games, except now the viewpoint is aerial, the action is more arcade-like, and the blood and gore is...okay, it's still bloody and gory. The game is also somewhat simplified, deceptively so, as Mini Slayer never runs out of ammo and never stops shooting at his enemies; just watch him go. Well, except when performing a rechargeable special attack, like when he slices and dices enemies with a sword, or when he takes out a group of monsters with a rocket launcher.
What really makes this work well, though, is how the rectangular levels become more and more complicated as you progress, with breakable walls that make this maze-like, and such environmental hazards as spiked floors and moving saw blades. That, and how the Mini Slayer is constantly adding new abilities and improvements, such as bouncy bullets or ones that go through enemies to kill anyone standing behind them. On the flipside, the Mini Slayer can only restore his health mid-battle by hoping he stuns someone, which allows him to execute them with his wrist-mounted blade. Further adding challenge, the game has nine chapters, 40 levels each (save for one, which has 20), but you can only unlock the next chapter by beating every level in a single run. All of which works together, and seamlessly, to make Mighty Doom as frantic, engaging, and ultimately as addictive as, well, the bigger Doom games.
Talk to Your Kids About ...
Families can talk about violence in video games. Is the impact of the violence in Mighty Doom affected by the fact that players can opt to have the blood be pink or green, or have no blood at all? Does being so bloody, or not so bloody, make you feel any differently about killing demons? And do you feel different that they're demons and not people?
Families can talk about cuteness. Mighty Doom is bloody and violent, but the characters are cute, even the monsters, so is this misleading? Should adult things not look cute and kiddie, or is it okay for adults to have cute things, too?
App Details
- Devices: iPhone , iPad , Android
- Pricing structure: Free (free with ads and microtransactions)
- Release date: March 21, 2023
- Category: Arcade Games
- Topics: Adventures , Monsters, Ghosts, and Vampires
- Publisher: Bethesda Softworks LLC
- Version: 1.0.0
- Minimum software requirements: Requires iOS 14.0 or later; Android 10 and up
- Last updated: April 4, 2023
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