Have you ever wanted to play God? Well now you can! Even though I’m kidding, game developer Atlus Software has used the Nintendo DS to give us the power to play doctor, but not the doctor we used play to back in grade school.
Paging Dr. DS In Trauma Center: Under The Knife, you take on the role of young blood surgeon Derek Stiles, who’s fresh out of his scrubs and ready to prove his worth. At the beginning of the game you start off wandering around your hospital, speaking to other doctors and nurses in infamous Japanese Text-Based style gaming. Soon enough young Derek will get tossed into the fire. Scalpel! Your first operation won’t be too difficult. The top half of the DS is dedicated to communicating with your nurses who will help you through the surgical process for your first few operations. They’ll take you step my step as to what tools do what and how to use each tool. And when they feel that you are competent enough to not maim your patient, you will be set out on your own to tackle all sorts of timed surgeries. The Tools of the Trade. The bottom half of the DS is your operating table, so to speak. You will have access to all your tools here, and this will be where all the surgeries take place. With injuries ranging from burns and lacerations to tumors, you’ll have a plethora of tools at your disposal. There will be the usual: scalpel (for slicing), stitches (for stitching, I’m sure) and cotton swab (for applying ointments). There will be instances where say, you have to pull out a tumor you’ve cut or even some glass that a kid got stuck in his arm. You can use the ultrasound to get an x-ray of your patient to find the foreign object in question, and then you can use your tweezers to yank it out. Maybe yank was a bit too aggressive of a term. If you’re using the tweezers and you pull on something the wrong way, you will harm your patient.
The Rocket Science When you select a tool a respective mini-game will trigger for that particular healing function. Stitching will require you to actually draw stitches on the patient. The scalpel will bring up a pre-determined course for you to cut along using your stylus.. Developer Atlus expected some of us to take advantage of the scalpel, so the ability to free roam with the tool and create your “own surgeries” has been removed. As I touched upon before, each operation is timed. You’ll have a diagnosis so you’ll know pretty much what you have to do. Completing the surgery with artistic precision is the underlying goal, because you can and most likely will, lose your patients. Ok and your patience.
Trauma Center is definitely a unique sim game. I don’t believe it’s a title worth investing in a DS for, but it’s surely a title you would want to try at least once. Plus it’ll give me an excuse to print up a fake diploma with MD plastered all over it. |