Ben 10 Omniverse Games Xbox 360 Cheats

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System: Xbox 360, PS3, Wii U, 3DS, DS, Wii
Dev: Monkey Bar Games
Pub: D3 Publisher
Release: November 13, 2012
Players: 1
Screen Resolution: 480p-1080pCartoon Violence

Xbox 360 cheats, codes, tips, hints, secrets, achievements and more for Ben 10 Omniverse 2 on the Xbox 360. Welcome to our collection of Ben 10: Omniverse, cheats, cheat codes, wallpapers and more for X360. Visit our dedicated Ben 10: Omniverse message board to discuss this game with other members. Check back for more Ben 10: Omniverse cheats to be posted. This page contains Ben 10: Omniverse cheats, hints, walkthroughs and more for XBOX 360. Ben 10: Omniverse. Right now we have 3 Cheats and etc for this game and every day we increase our collection with new Ben 10: Omniverse cheats If you can not find the needed cheat in our list, check this page periodically or subscribe for this game's updates!

Omniverse's 'hook' is the same as most other Ben 10 titles—as Ben, you have the ability to morph into any one of 13 different aliens, each of which have certain unique abilities. Well, insofar as 'unique' means giving a different color palate and animation for attacks which virtually carry the same effect. So, if you want to shoot lightning, morph young Ben into Feedback. If you want to shoot fire, switch him into Heatblast. And if you want to be a dude with four arms, turn him into Four Arms. The choice is yours—save for a few aliens that are specific to either young Ben or teen Ben—but no matter who you pick, you're still going to be tapping the attack button until a given group of opponents goes down.

Ben

There are moments when you'll have to use a specific alien, such as needing Four Arms to climb walls or the LEGO-like Bloxx to create bridges, but even these feel uninteresting due to their being forced upon you at random points throughout the levels. Personally, I stuck with the same rotation of four aliens throughout my entire five-hour playthrough—Omniverse is short, by the way—not only because there's no incentive to switch things up, but because there's no real personality to most of these alternate characters anyway.

The best thing I can say about Ben 10 Omniverse is that it works. It's functional. It's more of a product than a video game, and as such works as you'd expect any other type of product to. It controls fine, it's somewhat coherent, and the environments, while barren, are competently strung together. I only experienced one bug during my time with it, but a quick reload swiftly fixed that up. There are even some quick time events during the boss battles that feature kills that at least look satisfying. Kids who buy this expecting nothing more than a chance to control their favorite cartoon character will, in all likelihood, find enough here to amuse themselves for an afternoon or two, although they shouldn't.

But being competent enough to maybe hold a child's interest doesn't equal being a good game. And Ben 10 Omniverse is certainly not that. This is an exercise in tedium, a substandard brawler that exudes laziness at almost every turn. The recommendation will surely be made that Omniverse should be picked up for Ben 10 fans or young children in general, but why would anyone want to subject such potentially creative minds to something so unimaginative? Surely we can do better—if not for us, then at least for the children.

By
Jeff Dunn
Lead Contributor
Date: November 26, 2012

Graphics
Imagine a cel-shaded art style reminiscent of The Walking Dead, only designed for the PS2. Shoddy production values. Some of Ben's aliens are designed nicely, though.
Control
They work. You won't be doing much interesting with them, but for what you're given, they'll never get in your way.
Music / Sound FX / Voice Acting
The sounds here—like the levels and combat—repeat themselves too much for comfort. Ben, Rook, and others are voiced fine enough.
Play Value
There's a New Game Plus mode, and an easy Achievement list to be had, but it'll be a slog trying to make it through Omniverse more than once.
Overall Rating - Poor
Not an average. See Rating legend below for a final score breakdown.
Review Rating Legend
0.1 - 1.9 = Avoid2.5 - 2.9 = Average3.5 - 3.9 = Good4.5 - 4.9 = Must Buy
2.0 - 2.4 = Poor3.0 - 3.4 = Fair4.0 - 4.4 = Great5.0 = The Best

Ben 10 Omniverse Games Xbox 360 Cheats

There are moments when you'll have to use a specific alien, such as needing Four Arms to climb walls or the LEGO-like Bloxx to create bridges, but even these feel uninteresting due to their being forced upon you at random points throughout the levels. Personally, I stuck with the same rotation of four aliens throughout my entire five-hour playthrough—Omniverse is short, by the way—not only because there's no incentive to switch things up, but because there's no real personality to most of these alternate characters anyway.

The best thing I can say about Ben 10 Omniverse is that it works. It's functional. It's more of a product than a video game, and as such works as you'd expect any other type of product to. It controls fine, it's somewhat coherent, and the environments, while barren, are competently strung together. I only experienced one bug during my time with it, but a quick reload swiftly fixed that up. There are even some quick time events during the boss battles that feature kills that at least look satisfying. Kids who buy this expecting nothing more than a chance to control their favorite cartoon character will, in all likelihood, find enough here to amuse themselves for an afternoon or two, although they shouldn't.

But being competent enough to maybe hold a child's interest doesn't equal being a good game. And Ben 10 Omniverse is certainly not that. This is an exercise in tedium, a substandard brawler that exudes laziness at almost every turn. The recommendation will surely be made that Omniverse should be picked up for Ben 10 fans or young children in general, but why would anyone want to subject such potentially creative minds to something so unimaginative? Surely we can do better—if not for us, then at least for the children.

By
Jeff Dunn
Lead Contributor
Date: November 26, 2012

Graphics
Imagine a cel-shaded art style reminiscent of The Walking Dead, only designed for the PS2. Shoddy production values. Some of Ben's aliens are designed nicely, though.
Control
They work. You won't be doing much interesting with them, but for what you're given, they'll never get in your way.
Music / Sound FX / Voice Acting
The sounds here—like the levels and combat—repeat themselves too much for comfort. Ben, Rook, and others are voiced fine enough.
Play Value
There's a New Game Plus mode, and an easy Achievement list to be had, but it'll be a slog trying to make it through Omniverse more than once.
Overall Rating - Poor
Not an average. See Rating legend below for a final score breakdown.
Review Rating Legend
0.1 - 1.9 = Avoid2.5 - 2.9 = Average3.5 - 3.9 = Good4.5 - 4.9 = Must Buy
2.0 - 2.4 = Poor3.0 - 3.4 = Fair4.0 - 4.4 = Great5.0 = The Best

Game Features:

Ben 10 Omniverse Games Pc

  • Fast-paced action featuring characters and a new storyline from the brand new Ben 10 Omniverse TV series.
  • Play as both Teen Ben and Young Ben plus Rook, Ben's new partner.
  • Play single-player or two-player co-op mode: One player controls Ben and the other player controls Rook (Wii, WiiU, 360 and PS3).
  • 16 playable characters including exciting new aliens like Feedback, Gravattack, Bloxx, and Shocksquatch.
  • Upgrade new attacks and combos for Ben's 13 alien forms and Rook's Proto-Tool, a high tech multifunctional weapon that turns into a Blaster, Power Sword, Quantum Staff, or Grappler.
  • 11 Action-packed levels set in show-inspired settings like the subterranean alien city of Undertown, and the new Plumber base.




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