Directing a movie about fighter pilots and having Namco’s Project Aces team make the game of it is sort of like making an action flick and getting Infinity Ward on board, or a fantasy adventure movie with Square Enix handling the console translation. No developer on Earth has Namco’s pedigree when it comes to sky-high arcade combat, with eight Ace Combat games under their belt, but it’s the first time they’ve lent their expertise to a despicable movie license.
The movie is an animated flick from the director of Ghost in the Shell about a team of never-aging, genetically engineered parallel universe pilots engaged in a war staged for entertainment by two corporations in an otherwise peaceful world. Yep.
Cutting straight through that nonsense, the plot becomes a wafer-thin premise upon which to bring Ace Combat to the Wii, for that’s exactly what Namco have done. Aside from a few new tricks and tweaks, and minus the ultra-modern planes seen in the recent Ace Combat titles on other consoles, Sky Crawlers: Innocent Aces is as Ace Combat as they come. It feels like an AC game, has disgustingly dense menus like an AC game, lifts the same mission structure from recent AC games and even borrows a bunch of sound effects from the most recent console Ace Combat.
That’s a recipe for bombing runs, dogfights, escort missions and epic battles against a dozen enemy planes, with lengthy, pretentious cutscenes in between about how war is bad m’kay, complete with beautiful aircraft handling and high-speed aerobatics. But the Wii brings three new features to the party – one good, two bad. Let’s do the bad first so the review ends on a nicer note, eh?
While the plane models are suitably impressive in isolation, the game doesn’t look nearly as good as past Ace Combat titles. Normally that’s small cause for complaint in a game this good, but Ace Combat is a series that’s always been among the most beautiful games on its home console – from PlayStation to PS2 to PSP to 360. Nobody would expect Innocent Aces to approach AC6 levels of photorealistic beauty, but it could surely have looked at least as good as the last PS2 game, were the team given more time on the project.