Like practically every other Warner title for some time, the DVD's menus are static and silent, save for
the scored main screen.
Oddly, the DVD gets a new and different menu scheme, the loudly -
scored main screen supplying a high - angle view of the circus as clowns scamper about and Dumbo and Timothy Mouse fly above.
Not exact matches
Once you've accessed an event, instead of the very low key live
scores screen along with the odds in the
main content area, you now get much more detailed game stats and live odds.
The menu's
main page and introare animated and
scored, while the second level
screens are
scored.
The
main menu
screen is a simple montage of film clips set to the film's generic action
score.
The menus opt for a tree motif, with most of the listings appearing as bark scratchings, all
screens accompanied by serene pieces of
score, and the
Main Menu rotating through character images in a watery fashion.
In addition to the isolated
score, there's a music video of Thrussell's more techno - based
Main Title, using film clips and geometric patterns rippling across the
screen.
The
main menu
screen features fast - flying Toy Story 2 concept art in the background while
score from the movie plays.
Apart from the animated
main menu, the 16x9 selection
screens are static, with excerpts of Paul Haslinger's
score playing continuously on a loop.
Its three static menus (
main, languages, scenes) supply the bare essentials, with
score accompanying the one - sheet - reformatting
main screen.
The DVD's simple
main menu plays a
scored montage of clips, filling and occasionally dividing the
screen.
The animated
main menu plays
screen - filling clips and
score based on what title is highlighted, switching almost seamlessly between the two as you navigate.
The static menus are adapted from the cover art and publicity stills, with the
main screen accompanied by
score.
The
scored main menu divides the
screen into various pieces of thrill - seeking.
Per Warner's present standards, both DVDs are equipped with still menu
screens, only the
main / first page of which is
scored.
The 16x9
main menu is animated, with various clips from the movie a
score selection playing behind the basic on -
screen options.
The
main menu features a collection of a scenes in each corner of the
screen that take turns playing, while the
score plays over it all.
The animated 16x9 - enhanced
main menu
screen is appropriate in appearance and design, but unfortunately it and the bonus features menu (which has a still frame background) are accompanied by a portion of the annoying film
score.
The 16x9
main menu and bonus features
screen make use of white and silver colors to suggest a wedding and back up rotating clips from the film with selections from the
score.
The two complaints that I would level against the
main campaign is that it begins to grind toward the end with most objectives feeling pretty similar, but then this style of game is repetitive by its very nature, and that it's not always clearly signposted which objective will finish off the map, often leading me to completing an objective and suddenly find myself on the
scoring screen when I actually wanted to keep my island going for a while.
I found that the «co-op» concept in video games often boiled down to having a duplicate of the
main character on the
screen, resulting most of the time in a competition between players to get the highest
score or lead the way.
Getting a high
score was the
main objective of each level, with the level ending when the Yoshi ate 30 pieces of fruit to complete the border around the
screen.
The
main dichotomy in Hotline Miami is how the game deliberately urges the player forward through its music, visuals and
scoring — but then lurches them back through uncertainty in the narrative and the sheer horror of the violence on
screen.
As for the
screen?The edge part of the
screen can be used for notifications, playback controls, news, sports
scores and it can even become a night clock that can be used without turning on the «
main» part of the display — thanks to the fact it is an AMOLED
screen.