We do a little bowling and we drink a little vino
This one is another recommendation from my local video game dispensary. They told me they thought I had asked them to keep an eye out for The Flintstones: Bedrock Bowling on PS1 (also on PC). I did no such thing. I had never heard of this game since then. However, I can understand why you would want to exploit a boon, such as someone who intentionally buys bad games. You don’t have to be dishonest about it.
The Flintstoneās was something that was perpetually syndicated when I was a kid, so even though it was off the air for 20 years before I was born, Iām rather familiar with the source material. I also love bowling when I was growing up. It was the sport that took place in the closest proximity to a Metal Slug arcade cabinet. I also love games that I can wrap up in 20 minutes, so The Flintstones: Bedrock Bowling really has a lot going for it out of the gate.
New saucer-sled land speed record
The story sees the stars of the popular vitamin bottle really wanting to go bowling. However, Fred Flintstoneās boss demands he put in overtime in the quarry, which threatens their evening activities. I guess they didnāt have unions back in the Stone Age. Wait, yes they did. Unions were the butt of a joke once. I guess itās not so funny when Fred is having his job threatened by his employer unless he does overtime.
Anyway, The Great Gazoo, the universe’s most lovable genocidal maniac and one of the showās worst ideas, shows up and decides heās going to help out. He converts the quarry into a giant bowling course complete with bowling sleds, and sends Fred, his neighbor, his children, and his dog hurtling down it on a collision course with various trash. I’m not sure how much you know about bowling, but this is entirely not it. This is more like tobogganing down one of those hills with āNo Sleddingā signs everywhere.
I chose Fred as my bowling ball because Pebbles, Bamm-Bamm, and Dino are all just variations of the worst things imaginable. Every utterance they make is like a hailstorm of glass raging in my ear canals. I also tried Barney once, and he controls like an oiled-up sea lion.
Prolonged exposure
I may have hinted at this already, but The Flintstones Bedrock Bowling doesnāt really share anything in common with actual bowling aside from the pins. Thatās a shame because the early 3D era of video games definitely didnāt give us enough mediocre bowling titles.
Instead, Fred and everyone less tolerable get dropped into little sleds and are sent down twisting hills. You need to steer into pins and gems. There are also obstacles you need to avoid, but these just seem to slow you down. Let me be clear that there is no time limit to Bedrock Bowling, and I donāt think you get a bonus for doing a lane quickly, so I have no idea why getting slowed down would be considered a punishment. Similarly, I also donāt know why there is a boost button. Wait, yes, I do. Itās so the pain will end quicker.
For that matter, there are also three āDodosā on the track. If you hit them all before getting to the finish line, the track gets extended, which is necessary to hit the three-or-so more pins needed for a strike.
If you manage to hit all the Dodos in a group of lanes, youāll get to visit a secret stage. There are three secret lanes in total, with the last one being a reward for turning every Dodo into road kill. Once again, The Flintstones Bedrock Bowling rewards you by giving you more game to play, which seems more like a loss here.
Dum-dum
Iām a Canadian, so tobogganing is in my blood. However, Iām not sure you need to be a walking perversion of gravity to win at The Flintstones Bedrock Bowling. I canāt even say if losing is possible. From what I can tell, this is supposed to be a competitive sort of affair, which sounds like a good way to progress a relationship beyond simple friendship and into the realm of a mutual nap.
If you play it by yourself, you just get a tally of your score at the end. The Great Gazoo doesnāt call you a dum-dum if you do poorly. Or, perhaps I just didnāt do poorly enough to get cussed out by the spaceman.
I suppose thatās sort of what bowling actually is. Itās a game of physical solitaire that we usually play in proximity to other people to make it more interesting. Nobody interacts aside from hoots and butt-pats when a strike is landed. Thereās an overall cap on how well you can do, so playing by yourself is only beneficial in improving your consistency and technique. In a way, thatās what The Flintstones Bedrock Bowling is doing for you, only youād have a much tougher time finding anyone to play with you.
Actually, I never checked. Can you add an AI player?
No, you canāt. Nevermind.
Cooked turkey
I said this earlier, but a complete playthrough of The Flintstones: Bedrock Bowling takes about 20 minutes for an entire playthrough. Thatās probably a good thing, because it doesnāt even really earn that runtime. It also could have been longer. There is at least a good variety to the tracks, with one of them even letting you jump inside of a movie. So, they could have gotten more mileage out of repeating themes, but letās pretend I didnāt say that.
At my very most generous, Iād say that The Flintstones: Bedrock Bowling is at least not offensively bad. Unless you really like The Flintstones. Or bowling. Or just fun in general. Um, okay, that wasnāt very generous. Letās try: it took me less time to play The Flintstones: Bedrock Bowling than it did to scream out all the lasting trauma that it inflicted on me. I think thatās the best I can do.
For previous Weekly Kusoge, check this link!
Published: Jun 24, 2023 04:00 pm