Doctor Who: The Eternity Clock Review [PS3/PSN]
Play as The Doctor and River Song in this puzzle based action game on PSN.

rating: 3
Doctor Who comes to PSN. Supermassive Games along with the BBC bring us Doctor Who: The Eternity Clock and from the opening menus that are reminiscent of the TV shows opening credits, this feels like a Doctor Who game trying to set a standard. Unfortunately it doesnt take long to realise this isnt a new standard in console gaming but really just a good game when compared to phone/tablet gaming, which is where these sorts of games tend to live. Immediately you are struck with the limitations of the game. Starting in the downed TARDIS (the story begins with the TARDIS out of control and crashing to Earth shock!) you desperately want to explore the blue box but you cant. Its left or right all the way with only with a few button options on the TARDIS console and a few well delivered quips from Matt Smith as the Doctor. Upon leaving the TARDIS and walking into your first time line (of which there are three - sixteenth century London, present day London and future London) youll start to have flashbacks to old school puzzle platformers with limited left/right, walking/climbing or up and down via ladder movement and the odd thing to move about to solve a problem. Essentially the left stick moves you about, the right stick enables you to scan the area with your sonic screwdriver and find ways out for your predicament.
The game will last you 6-8 hours. Theres a bunch of collectables to find (the Doctors hat collection and Songs diary notes) . There are a few difficulty levels but all these do is affect the time you have to solve puzzles rather than making them harder. The game is pretty linear and easy to work out for the most part making it pretty ideal for the kid element of shows target audience (the game all but tells you what to do most of the time). The odd bug crops up in the animation (and I also had a couple of crashes) which can sometimes make this game a little frustrating, especially in the River Song sneaking about levels but generally I think Doctor Who fans will get a bigger time travelling buzz from this, if only for the solid voice work and the TV show's score thumping away to make this feel more exciting than it really is. More hardcore gamers will spot the problems and limitations immediately and while both sides of the fence will get a tiny kick out of the game due to its relatively easy to pick up structure, though I highly doubt it will last that long in amongst the far superior PS3 options you have out there. Trophies
7 Bronze
6 Silver
33 Hidden
2 Gold
1 Platinum
Doctor Who: The Eternity Clock PSN/ PS3 Scores GameplayDoctor Who: The Eternity Clock is available for purchase now.