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Home > Review Archive > Video Games > Results: Da Vinci Code

Da Vinci Code
by Marc Saltzman
May 07, 2007

Did your kids read the book? See the movie? Do they have the DVD? How about Tom Hank's hair cut? Well, they might as well play the game then....

Reviewed for PC, PS2, XBOX.

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Scroll down for our Kid Factor.

GamerDad Seal Of Approval - 14+.  Click to learn more about our review seal. The ESRB Found:
Blood:
GamerDad found a little bit of blood during combat and when investigating a murder. Nothing gratuitous.
Language: Mild cursing, "damn, goddamn" that sort of thing.
Violence: The game's combat isn't especially graphic, but is a bit too much for younger gamers.


You've read the book and seen the movie ヨ now you can play the game.

Based on Dan Brown's incredibly popular novel -- currently in its 104th printing -- and the Hollywood blockbuster of the same name, "The Da Vinci Code" is a controversial adventure game that challenges players to unravel a 2,000-year-old secret.

Despite the bland performances by the game's two main protagonists, "The Da Vinci Code" fares well as a video game thanks to its clever puzzles, new story elements and extra locations not found in the book or film.

Players control two characters throughout the course of the game: Robert Langdon, a professor of Symbology and murder suspect on the run, and Sophie Neveu, a French cryptographer with the Judicial Police and granddaughter of the mysterious Jacques Saunière, who was killed in the Louvre museum at the start of the adventure.

If you can get past the monotonous-sounding dialogue and lifeless interaction between Langdon and Neveu, "The Da Vinci Code" does offer some compelling game-play. For example, Langdon must search for clues on and around Saunière's slain body, type in the correct code scribbled on the back of Neveu's business card to hear a recorded message, and then throw off the French inspector by combining the planted GPS "dot" with a bar of soap before throwing it out of the bathroom window.

A few minutes later you're controlling Neveu, who tiptoes undetected through the Louvre to steal an ultraviolet light, deciphers some cryptic puzzles with the help of one of her grandfather's books, and then stealthily attacks a guard and drags his unconscious body into the shadows.

All of this, by the way, takes place only within the first 45 minutes of the game.

Between evading those on their trail, searching for the Holy Grail and unlocking the shocking truth behind a secret society, Langdon and Neveu will travel to many locations -- such as the Saint-Sulpice church in Paris and Westminster Abbey in the U.K. -- to collect clues, store and combine items in their inventory, solve head-scratching puzzles and battle a number of foes.

Some of the fighting sequences require players to quickly press specific buttons on the controller (example: "B" "B" "X" for the Xbox version) in order to perform a move that can neutralize an enemy. Think of it as a kind of "Dance Dance Revolution"-inspired exercise that requires quick reflexes and memorization of the controller's button layout. Players can also find and brandish a weapon such as candlesticks, two-by-fours, lead pipes and wrenches.

Other moves at the player's disposal include peeking behind a wall, healing oneself with first aid kits and bandages, and causing a sound distraction by tossing an item, such as a soda can or rocks, to draw an opponent's attention away from your location.

Those who've read the book or seen the movie may better appreciate this interactive version of "The Da Vinci Code," but any video game fan who enjoys a good story and plenty of investigative work should also enjoy this adventure ヨ even if they don't know the difference between the Priory of Sion and Manus Dei.



Click to learn more about GamerDad's Kid Factor review section. There's nothing in this game you wouldn't find in the book and/or film. If anything, it's a bit tamer than the movie because the fighting sequences here are intense, but not graphic. The subject matter is still controversial to some groups, so be wary if you're a devout Catholic (or an Albino) but this one is safe for teens who've either read the book or seen the movie and this allows families to experience the story together.

Other Platforms
PC: Keyboard layout makes the game easier, as does the mouse.
Xbox/PS2: Fundamentally the same game as above, only it uses a gamepad and suffers - barely - its limitations.


Kid Factor by Andrew Bub

This review edited by Andrew Bub

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Home > Review Archive > Video Games > Results: Da Vinci Code
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Game Info:
Platform(s):
PC, PS2, XBOX

ESRB rating:
T - Teen

Blood, Language, Violence

Score:






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