Compara los precios de Sonic 3D Blast Key en tiendas de claves de confianza y encuentra la mejor oferta. Desarrollado por SEGA. Publicado por SEGA. Lanzado el 1/6/2010. Disponible en PC. Géneros: Single Player, Third Person, Bird View, Arcade, Platform.

A slow, isometric Sonic that ditches speed for Flicky-herding across seven themed zones. Nostalgia bait with real charm, but modern Windows compatibility is genuinely rough.

Sonic 3D Blast is exactly what it sounds like and also nothing like what you expect from a Sonic game. Developed by Traveller's Tales (yes, the LEGO people) and based closely on the Sega Saturn version, the PC port gives you enhanced visuals and sound over the original Genesis release, but swaps out the Saturn's special stages for software-rendered half-pipe bonus rounds instead. The core loop is isometric arcade platforming: stomp robots, catch the five Flickies they release per zone section, herd the little birds into a warp ring, move on. Seven zones, each with two standard acts and a boss fight, clocking in at around three to four hours if you're decent at it. It is not a speed game. Sonic spins, spin-dashes into secret areas, jumps on things, and collects rings as health currency, but the pace is deliberate and the camera is fixed at a bird's-eye isometric angle that makes some jumps genuinely awkward to judge. The Flicky mechanic is the whole game, for better and worse. Smash a badnik, out pops a coloured bird, and it trails behind you until you reach the ring. Get hit and they scatter, with green and red Flickies being particularly spiteful about running off in random directions. It is repetitive by design, and the community has been saying so since 1996. What keeps it from being a slog for most people is the zone variety: Green Grove is breezy and approachable, Diamond Dust is a gorgeous icy zone with satisfying hidden areas, Gene Gadget brings back pipe-and-speed energy, and Panic Puppet is a legitimate challenge with moving stairs and steep platforms. Bosses are tougher than the classic 2D entries, which is a genuine positive. Special stages involve finding Tails or Knuckles hidden in a level with 50 rings in hand, then running a half-pipe collecting rings and dodging mines to earn a Chaos Emerald. Collect all seven and you unlock the true final boss and ending. Here is the honest PC-specific situation you need to know before buying. This version uses DirectDraw, and newer versions of Windows have minimal support for it, meaning poor frame rates out of the box. Some reprints are also missing the music entirely. The fan-made Sega PC Reloaded patch fixes modern compatibility and adds configuration options, and PCGamingWiki has it documented clearly. You will almost certainly need it. This is a vintage port doing vintage port things, and treating it otherwise will end in frustration. If you want plug-and-play reliability, the emulated Genesis version on Steam is the cleaner option, though this PC version has the better visuals and sound when it actually runs. As a solo single-player experience aimed at Sonic fans or retro platformer collectors, it occupies a specific and honest niche. There is no multiplayer, no co-op, no split-screen, and nothing here for the Saturday night crew. It is a one-person trip through a polarising piece of mid-90s platformer history: a game the community argues about endlessly, praised for its eclectic soundtrack ranging from techno-pop to jazz, and criticised for controls that feel slippery and a perspective that fights you on precision. If you bounced off it as a kid and are curious, the PC version with the compatibility patch is a fair way to revisit it. If you have never played it, come in knowing it is a curio from a specific moment in Sonic history, not a lost classic. Riley, Scout Team

Sonic 3D Blast Key
Single PlayerThird PersonBird ViewArcadePlatform

Sonic 3D Blast Key

1 jun 2010SEGA
GamerScout opina

A slow, isometric Sonic that ditches speed for Flicky-herding across seven themed zones. Nostalgia bait with real charm, but modern Windows compatibility is genuinely rough.

PC
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€0.00
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Mínimo histórico: €69.95

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Sonic 3D Blast is exactly what it sounds like and also nothing like what you expect from a Sonic game. Developed by Traveller's Tales (yes, the LEGO people) and based closely on the Sega Saturn version, the PC port gives you enhanced visuals and sound over the original Genesis release, but swaps out the Saturn's special stages for software-rendered half-pipe bonus rounds instead. The core loop is isometric arcade platforming: stomp robots, catch the five Flickies they release per zone section, herd the little birds into a warp ring, move on. Seven zones, each with two standard acts and a boss fight, clocking in at around three to four hours if you're decent at it. It is not a speed game. Sonic spins, spin-dashes into secret areas, jumps on things, and collects rings as health currency, but the pace is deliberate and the camera is fixed at a bird's-eye isometric angle that makes some jumps genuinely awkward to judge. The Flicky mechanic is the whole game, for better and worse. Smash a badnik, out pops a coloured bird, and it trails behind you until you reach the ring. Get hit and they scatter, with green and red Flickies being particularly spiteful about running off in random directions. It is repetitive by design, and the community has been saying so since 1996. What keeps it from being a slog for most people is the zone variety: Green Grove is breezy and approachable, Diamond Dust is a gorgeous icy zone with satisfying hidden areas, Gene Gadget brings back pipe-and-speed energy, and Panic Puppet is a legitimate challenge with moving stairs and steep platforms. Bosses are tougher than the classic 2D entries, which is a genuine positive. Special stages involve finding Tails or Knuckles hidden in a level with 50 rings in hand, then running a half-pipe collecting rings and dodging mines to earn a Chaos Emerald. Collect all seven and you unlock the true final boss and ending. Here is the honest PC-specific situation you need to know before buying. This version uses DirectDraw, and newer versions of Windows have minimal support for it, meaning poor frame rates out of the box. Some reprints are also missing the music entirely. The fan-made Sega PC Reloaded patch fixes modern compatibility and adds configuration options, and PCGamingWiki has it documented clearly. You will almost certainly need it. This is a vintage port doing vintage port things, and treating it otherwise will end in frustration. If you want plug-and-play reliability, the emulated Genesis version on Steam is the cleaner option, though this PC version has the better visuals and sound when it actually runs. As a solo single-player experience aimed at Sonic fans or retro platformer collectors, it occupies a specific and honest niche. There is no multiplayer, no co-op, no split-screen, and nothing here for the Saturday night crew. It is a one-person trip through a polarising piece of mid-90s platformer history: a game the community argues about endlessly, praised for its eclectic soundtrack ranging from techno-pop to jazz, and criticised for controls that feel slippery and a perspective that fights you on precision. If you bounced off it as a kid and are curious, the PC version with the compatibility patch is a fair way to revisit it. If you have never played it, come in knowing it is a curio from a specific moment in Sonic history, not a lost classic.

Riley
Riley · Scout Team

Sports & racing

Etiquetas

steamIsometric PlatformerRetroFlicky-HerdingChaos Emerald HuntCompatibility Patch RequiredBoss Rush FinaleShort PlaythroughClassic Sonic

Requisitos del sistema

Mínimos

DirectX
DirectX® 9.0
Storage
50MB disc space
Processor
32MB
System requirements
Windows® XP

Recomendados

DirectX
DirectX® 9c
Storage
50MB disc space
Graphics
NVidia GeForce GTX 280 or ATI Radeon HD 6630 DirectX® 9c 1GB VRam / Intel i3-2100 or AMD Phenom II X4 940 dual core CPU
System requirements
Windows® XP

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Información del juego

Desarrolladora
SEGA
Distribuidora
SEGA
Fecha de lanzamiento
1 jun 2010

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¿En qué plataformas está disponible Sonic 3D Blast Key?

Sonic 3D Blast Key está disponible en PC.

¿Cuándo se lanzó Sonic 3D Blast Key?

Sonic 3D Blast Key se lanzó el 1 de junio de 2010.

¿Quién desarrolló Sonic 3D Blast Key?

Sonic 3D Blast Key fue desarrollado por SEGA.