IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.5K
YOUR RATING
As suave secret agent 007, employ your cunning wit and high-tech gadgets to survive multiple levels of espionage based on exciting situations from the blockbuster film.As suave secret agent 007, employ your cunning wit and high-tech gadgets to survive multiple levels of espionage based on exciting situations from the blockbuster film.As suave secret agent 007, employ your cunning wit and high-tech gadgets to survive multiple levels of espionage based on exciting situations from the blockbuster film.
Adam Blackwood
- James Bond
- (voice)
Andrew Bicknell
- Stamper
- (voice)
- …
Miles Anderson
- Dr. Kaufmann
- (voice)
- …
Ève Karpf
- Paris Carver
- (voice)
Larissa Murray
- Wai Lin
- (voice)
Caron Pascoe
- M
- (voice)
Featured reviews
Okay, this game seems to have both good and bad personalities at the same time. When I first picked up this game, I was already hooked into beating the first mission...but, like every good game, you have to find flaws some time. Upon doing the ski missions, the AI is very annoying; for instance, you're on the first mission ski event. You're headed straight for a jump hill. Everything looks clear, but all of a sudden, an enemy soldier "appears" right next to you and slows you down, ruining your jump. Sometimes, you're accelerating at high speed, but then a soldier flies in out of nowhere and constantly whacks you with his ski pole. In some cases, the enemy could be under alert, and suddenly runs to a wall corner and continues to jog into it without even caring that you're shooting at him. And the cheat codes...this game is so glitchy that the codes just make it worse. If you're ever playing this game, be careful with using them.
One good aspect of this game is the music. I fight bosses numerous times just to listen to the 007 rock music playing in the background. But don't get me wrong, the game IS okay sometimes. But I'll admit, I'll give this game a 5.5/10.
One good aspect of this game is the music. I fight bosses numerous times just to listen to the 007 rock music playing in the background. But don't get me wrong, the game IS okay sometimes. But I'll admit, I'll give this game a 5.5/10.
This James bond game is pretty good because: The missions are pretty fun to play they can be hard sometimes that makes them fun to play they have lots of action most of the time the weapons you use are pretty good to use. The driving levels are pretty fun to do they are hard but fun. The voice over actors are pretty good but it would have been better if pierce brosnan was in it but who cares it is still fun to play. The way James bond looks in this game looks pretty good you can see pierce brosnan in him and same with the rest of the characters in the game. The graphics in this James bond game are OK.
Overall score ******* out of **********
Overall score ******* out of **********
"Tomorrow Never Dies" did very well in the charts, despite of the fact that the game really wasn`t worth buying, and a major disappointment for us who wanted a James Bond-game for the playstation like the fabulous "Goldeneye"(9/10) for Nintendo 64. "Tomorrow Never Dies" has nice presentation, with great clips from the movie(unlike "Goldeneye"), and it is well-produced. The game could`ve been so good, but the graphics and gameplay are not any good compared to recent playstation-titles like "Metal Gear Solid" and "Syphon Filter".
Let`s hope that the game based on "The World Is Not Enough" will be better. "Tomorrow Never Dies" is a missed opportunity. 4/10
Let`s hope that the game based on "The World Is Not Enough" will be better. "Tomorrow Never Dies" is a missed opportunity. 4/10
The James Bond film "Goldeneye" was better than "Tomorrow Never Dies" so I guess it makes sense that the game is too. This game does not resemble the highly successful game for the Nintendo 64 in the least. Which makes no sense, why would you do something so different for the next game? I guess it is a bit like the second Zelda game, the programmers did not want to appear lazy and thought that by adding an on screen James Bond the game would have more of a feel for the movie perhaps? I do not know, I am only taking a stab in the dark. The game play here is one where you see the game from behind Bond, he is fully visible. It is also an annoying game that just is not all that much fun. I will be the first to say I thought Goldeneye was overrated a bit, but I still enjoyed it, this one has a couple of fun levels, but to often it is an irritating mess. Why have Bond on the screen if all he is going to do is battle continuously, as both this game and the previous game ignore the fact Bond is more than just a super killer. Though I believe it is ignored more here than there. Sure you can ski and drive, but it really is just a short game where the combat kind of sucks. They always make being stealthy so hard and you end up in an all out shoot out for your life!
I got this game as, being a big fan of James Bond, plus having a PlayStation, I couldn't miss out it, or so I thought. After the sheer brilliance of Goldeneye, I, like most people expected a great deal from this game, but was extremely disappointed that I had wasted my well earned thirty five quid on a game, that despite having one of the best soundtracks I've ever heard on a game, plus cool movie sequences, is just too average to be up there with the likes of Goldeneye, which is still a great game today. It's by no means an awful game, but it's also hardly very good either. Worth a couple of night's rental (in which you could probably complete the game anyway!) but no more. Roll on "The World Is Not Enough".
Did you know
- TriviaOn the original VHS of Tomorrow Never Dies (1997), their was a brief trailer featuring Desmond Llewelyn playing a game for PlayStation, where he highlighted a game where the film ends. The game was originally called "Tomorrow Never Dies: The Mission Continues". Footage shows Bond skiing, scuba diving and driving in third person and on a first person shooting mission, the game had intended to come out in the Autumn of 1998 but for some reason the game wasn't released until November 1999 and with the Scuba Diving mission no where to be found.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Electric Playground: Episode #2.8 (1998)
- SoundtracksTomorrow Never Dies
Written by Sheryl Crow and Mitchell Froom
Performed by Sheryl Crow
Produced by Mitchell Froom
Details
- Color
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