Crash 1 on N. Sane Trilogy: How to get the Gold Relic on Road to Nowhere

Ladies and Gentlemen, here’s how to get the Gold Relic on Crash 1 N. Sane Trilogy’s Road to Nowhere. It’s known to be one of the toughest levels in the game, and getting a Gold Relic is challenging to say the least…

Unfortunately, getting the Relic is required in order to get the Platinum Trophy. Why? Because the developers want you to suffer…

Crash Trilogy is number one in UK charts again, takes it back from Final Fantasy 12 and beats Splatoon 2

It truly seems that there’s nothing that can stop the Bandicoot in the UK. He’s now secured the number one spot for three weeks and has even beaten Splatoon 2 to get there.

Takeaways:

  • The Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy has taken back the number one spot from Final Fantasy 12, which held it for a week.
  • Newcomer Splatoon 2 came in at number two, an impressive entry but not enough to stop Crash.
  • Splatoon 2 outperformed the first title, becoming the 3rd biggest Switch game launch behind giants Zelda and Mario.
  • Crash now matches The Last of Us: Remastered with the most weeks held at number one for a PS4-only title with 3 weeks. (Next week’s results could see it beat The Last of Us!).

The chance of us getting Crash Team Racing Remastered? I’d say it’s very high at this point with the success of the trilogy. Fans may finally get what they’ve been asking for.

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That big surprise for Crash fans? It’s a ridiculously difficult level called ‘Stormy Ascent’ that Naughty Dog cut

So Crash fans were due a surprise this week at Comic-Con. Well, it turns out that the main surprise is a new level and it’s so difficult that Naughty Dog cut it from the original game… Good luck!

Takeaways:

  • At San Diego Comic-Con developer Vicarious Visions announced that the level ‘Stormy Ascent’, originally cut from the first game, is now available for free until the 19th August. After that it will be $2.99.
  • The original stage’s level designer Taylor Kurosaki said: “It was one of the last levels I finished during production, and as we prepared to deliver our Gold Master to Sony for manufacturing, the decision was made to cut it”.
  • He than talked about the difficulty of the stage: “It was playable, but just too damn difficult, and we ran out of time to make it easier. It remained on the disc as it was less risky just leaving it rather than trying to remove it.”
  • Using the well-known cheat cartridge called GameShark, (back when cheats were a thing), players managed to find the level in the original game.
  • Vicarious Visions wanted to make the level available to all, but had trouble remaking it as they struggled to complete the level themselves… No, really.
  • Lucky the tortuous level wasn’t all that was announced: Dark Horse Comics confirmed the upcoming release of The Crash Bandicoot Files: How Willy the Wombat Sparked Marsupial Mania. Debuting in March 2018, it’s a lavish 150-page hardcover book that contains the original design document for Crash Bandicoot.

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  • But there’s even more news, you can now share the craziness of Crash and friends with CrashMoji, the new emoji and sticker app. CrashMoji is available this week on the App Store and the Google Play Store. Feel the love.

Phew. That’s a lot of Crash news folks. With the level of hype this new stage has received, I’m now determined to beat it. Here’s a taster of what it offers:

Will you be giving it a go?

Confirmed: The Crash Bandicoot remaster is harder than the original, “special surprise” is coming for fans

If, like me, while playing the Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy on PS4, you’ve thought: ‘I remember them being hard, but this hard?’. Well, it turns out you might be on to something. The developer has now confirmed that the games are indeed harder.

Takeaways:

  • Developer Vicarious Visions, writing over on Activision’s blog, has said that they chose the handling from Crash Bandicoot 3: Warped as the Trilogy’s starting point, as it represented the “most improved and modern approach”.
  • So how does that make the game harder then? Well, the developer ended up tuning Crash’s jump differently for each game, meaning that in the first Crash Bandicoot game in particular, you fall more quickly upon release of the ‘X’ button than you did in the original game. That can change everything.
  • The trilogy also features a different collision system to add to the fun: “Certain jumps require more precision than the originals. Much like the handling, we iterated on collision and physics throughout development to make it fair to all players and as faithful to the original games as possible”.
  • The developer now recommends you start with the second and third games before playing the first: “Come back to try Crash Bandicoot after you’ve had more practice. For those of you who played the originals and acquired a fair amount of muscle memory, re-learning the handling in our game may present an additional challenge”.
  • Vicarious Visions ended by teasing that “news that you won’t want to miss” will be announced at their panel at San Diego Comic-Con this Thursday.

So Crash fans weren’t wrong about it being harder – that makes me feel a little better as I look at my sore and battered hands. As for this “special surprise”, it could be anything from Crash 1 DLC to a Crash Team Racing Remaster (probably not). Stay tuned!

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Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy is top of the UK charts, again!

The excellent Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy has continued its dominance in the UK charts – can anything stop the genetically enhanced Bandicoot?

Takeaways:

  • The new (old?) Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy has secured the top spot in the UK charts for a second time.
  • It’s the first PS4 exclusive that has held the top spot since the mighty Uncharted 4 in 2016.
  • The N.Sane Trilogy is this year’s second biggest launch so far – behind Ubisoft’s multiplatform release Ghost Recon Wildlands.

The top ten games for this week are:

  1. Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy
  2. Grand Theft Auto 5
  3. Overwatch
  4. FIFA 17
  5. Micro Machines: World Series
  6. Battlefield 1
  7. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
  8. Call of Duty: Infinite Warfare
  9. Rocket League
  10. Horizon Zero Dawn

The desire for more Crash Bandicoot is real folks. So Sony, when can we expect that new game again?

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Review: Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy (PS4)

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the biggest nostalgia-trip of the year! Before we embark on this old, yet new journey, I must insist on warning ye who enters, that this is a highly subjective review. There are too many memories here for me to be objective about it. But if you are not familiar with Crash Bandicoot, I sincerely hope that my enthusiasm for these games will make you want to try it out for yourself – be your own judge. Since this is a trilogy, I have chosen not to make a complex review of each of them, but rather a short and concise review of my total impression of the games.

Because the wait is over: Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy is finally here. Everybody who played these games when they were younger was probably waiting with great excitement for this. I know I have been. I am here to tell you that the wait was not in vain. Back to collecting apples and crushing crates, ya’ll!

Activision proudly presents an explosive blast from the past!” With these words, the game is introduced in its new and polished form, and it becomes obvious who these games were revamped for – the generations that played them when they first came out: those already familiar with the universe. I instantly felt a rush of nostalgia, perhaps reaching its high point when playing Warped, mentally travelling back in time to when I was a little girl playing on my PlayStation. I spent countless hours on the Crash Bandicoot games – it is then, perhaps, no wonder that I have already spent an equal amount of time on the new version.

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Take it easy, buddy.

Great precision is required to play each of the games, although specifically in the first. The controls are fairly sensitive, but they have not changed. If you played the games when they first came out, then learning the controls will be no problem. I started playing with immediate ease because it was all so familiar. I then thought about muscle memory, and in Crash Bandicoot Warped, I could see how many levels still stuck with me after all these years – the result of perfecting them when I was younger.

One thing is demanded from you as a gamer: patience. Because these games… are difficult. If you’ve played the levels “Road To Nowhere” or “The High Road”, then you know what I am talking about. The first game is considerably harder than the two others. I don’t even know how many hours I spent on completing a single level. With that said, I realize that the majority of deaths are my own fault. When playing the first Bandicoot game, I often thought “was it really this difficult before?”. Sometimes the levels required such precision that they might come off as tedious. I will admit that I went full on rage-mode a couple of times and had to take a few hours break, otherwise I would have thrown the controller at the TV – but hey, who hasn’t?

Your pulse rate will certainly increase. The difficulty is heightened by throwing several challenges at you simultaneously, which creates some real rage-mode moments. In the levels where Crash (or Coco) is being chased, apart from being stress-inducing, there is a certain rhythm to the levels. With the difficulty gradually increasing, that rhythm is easily broken – ruining the flow of the game. That can be frustrating at times.

I am really impressed with how the games turned out visually. There has obviously been a huge upgrade to the graphics, and this is the most prominent change in the trilogy. The camera angles are simple, thus they serve some interesting challenges when it comes to depth perception. Everything looks so smooth and beautifully lighted – looking at how the sunlight peeks through the trees, and how the rain falls on the ground. The levels inside the crypts are excellent examples of just how good the lighting is. This, along with the lovely details to the characters such as nuanced facial expressions, creates a beautiful recreation of a beloved universe.

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Those pipes look a little bit hot.

The level design is very familiar and well-made – even though you will have to learn each of them. If you manage to soar through a level on the first try, kudos to you! I also love how each level feels a bit different from the last, and not simply a repetition of the previous ones (apart from the fact that in Warped, some of the levels are actually the same, only with a higher difficulty!). The levels offer different points of view, with themed music, and new mechanics such as belly flops and double jumps – all of these factors create a nice diversity to them.

But oh, the music! The sound effects! One can appreciate the familiarity of it all as we reunite with beloved characters such as Crash Bandicoot and his sister Coco, Aku Aku, Uka Uka (yes, confusing, I know), Cortex, and of course all the bosses you encounter throughout the games. I appreciate the fact that they implemented more playtime for Coco, and not just certain levels too.

Crash Bandicoot Warped is probably the game I played the most when I was younger. I remember spending so many hours on it, so it’s no wonder that I suddenly found myself spending the same amount of hours on it this time around. Warped definitely features the best music of all the Bandicoot games, and it’s the one I was looking forward to playing the most. However, it was interesting to see what had become of the other games as well. 

All in all, Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy is a trip down memory lane. It is nothing more, nothing less. The games within offer high entertainment value, and will definitely give you many hours of fun. The replayability is high because of the several hidden paths one might choose to take, and collecting different crystals and so on for the achievement hunter, if you are that kind of player. There’s plenty to go around. So have at it! By playing these games, I feel that I have reunited with a friend I didn’t even know I missed this much, solving puzzles together just like we did before. I’m glad I finally have the complete trilogy in my gaming inventory too, and that I can now revisit them whenever I want. 

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Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy is the biggest single-platform launch in the UK so far

Nostalgia and a good price will get your far folks. Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy has become the biggest single-platform launch in the UK so far. No mean feat.

Takeaways:

  • Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy is the biggest single-platform release of the year so far, even taking the crown from Horizon: Zero Dawn
  • It’s the first time Crash has ever won a UK number one
  • The game is this year’s second biggest launch overall, with multiplatform release Ghost Recon Wildlands in first
  • Call of Duty: Modern Warfare Remastered came in at a very low 32nd

Here’s the UK top 10 in full:

  1. Crash Trilogy
  2. Micro Machines
  3. GTA 5
  4. Forza Horizon 3
  5. FIFA 17
  6. Overwatch
  7. Elite Dangerous
  8. Mario Kart 8 Deluxe
  9. Dirt 4
  10. Rocket League

If Sony needed convincing that Crash should get a new game in the series, then this should easily be enough to do just that. Did you pick up Crash Bandicoot N.Sane Trilogy and relive your childhood? Let us know in the comments below, if you please.

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