Dr. Muto

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Dr. Muto
Dr. Muto
Developer(s) Midway Games
Publisher(s) Midway Games
Platforms PlayStation 2, Xbox, Nintendo GameCube, Game Boy Advance
Release date(s) PlayStation 2 & Xbox
    GameCube
      Game Boy Advance
        Genre(s) Platformer
        Mode(s) Single-player

        Dr. Muto is a 2002 platforming video game developed and published by Midway Games. It was released for the PlayStation 2 and Xbox on November 19, 2002[1][2] and later released for the Nintendo GameCube on December 17, 2002 [3] and Game Boy Advance on March 21, 2003.[4]

        The game follows Dr. Muto, a maniacal and genius mad scientist whose latest experiment has accidentally destroyed his own home planet. In order to rebuild his world, he steals organic matter from neighboring planets. Dr. Muto uses his invention, the Splizz Gun, to mutate and morph into other organisms to complete his tasks.[5] Overall, the game received mixed reviews by critics.

        Gameplay

        In the game, Dr. Muto has the ability to morph into many creatures, and use a variety of gadgets to get through the game. Dr. Muto is able to turn into 5 different creatures with the use of the Splizz Gun in the game. These can be unlocked by collecting items like isotopes and animal DNA. These morphs also have special extras. There are seven different gadgets Dr. Muto can use. Players get the Splizz Gun at the start of the game, it allows Dr. Muto to extract DNA from enemies, electrocute and shoot lasers at enemies, and allows him to morph into five different creatures.

        Plot

        Dr. Muto, a mad scientist, built a machine that would provide free, renewable energy for his home planet of Midway. However, the machine was sabotaged by Muto's rival, Professor Burnital, causing it to malfunction and destroy the planet. Dr. Muto and his laboratory survived. Now, Dr. Muto plans to build a machine called the Genitor 9000 that will rebuild Midway. However, the pieces necessary to assemble and run the machine are scattered across a number of neighboring planets and must be collected. There are 4250 isotopes and 86 bits of terra and they are all needed to complete the game.

        Reception

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        Scores
        Aggregate scores
        Aggregator Score
        GameRankings PS2: 72.2% (39 reviews) [6]
        GC: 70.2% (15 reviews) [7]
        Xbox: 73.0% (27 reviews) [8]
        GBA: 68.0% (2 reviews) [9]
        Metacritic PS2: 67% (21 reviews) [10]
        GC: 63% (6 reviews) [11]
        Xbox: 70% (13 reviews) [12]

        The game received overall positive critics, having a Metacritic score of around 70%.

        References

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        External links

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