Only thing is that he doesn't much care for are the Clakkerz that make all these treats. He's a fan of the Opple pie, Opple cluster, and Opple juice. Meagly McGraw is well known in outlaw circles as an Opple connoisseur. You will rarely see Meagly without his right-hand man and bodyguard, who lays down his life for Meagly during the boss fight against the Outlaw Boss. He started gathering Outlaws from far and wide round Buzzarton and expanded his forces to prepare to attack upon the one target he cared about in the current time: Farmer Beeks' Opple Farm. He was usually picked on for being small and wanted to make a name for himself to prove those who mocked him wrong. Meagly McGraw is a small guy, the smallest in his family, and he is always accompanied by his much beefier outlaw bodyguard, aptly called Tiny. Thank you for your attention and understanding! Happy reading and editing! If you wish to fight against misinformation, you're encouraged to contribute high-quality content to the wiki-that is content that's propped up by a trusted source (examples include:, Magog on the March, or The Oddworld Library) and contain no headcanons, theorizing, or any further content not directly coming from Oddworld Inhabitants. For this reason, we'd like to ask our readers to take everything here with a great chunk of salt, especially when it comes to content without valid citations. We'd like to dispel this rumor now: The Fandom Wiki is 100% community run and has in fact been long plagued by information of dubious validity, despite the valiant efforts of its editors (whose job we really appreciate, keep up the good fight!). That said, "Stranger's Wrath" is just as humorous and entertaining, and ultimately, it's a more gratifying adventure than its predecessors because of the live ammo gimmick that remains fresh until the game's conclusion.Recently OWI has began to publish posts on their Twitter citing articles from this site, along with content that heavily implies that the wiki is in some way official or sanctioned. Retailing for $49.99, "Oddworld Stranger's Wrath" includes a lot more action and violence than past "Oddworld" titles that relied on puzzle-solving (1997's "Oddworld: Abe's Oddysee") or cooperative teamwork (2001's "Oddworld: Munch's Oddysee"). The game is called "Oddworld" for a reason. To earn your bounty, you must walk up to the stunned (or deceased) outlaw and press the X button on the Xbox controller, which sucks him into a bag with a kind of portable vacuum cleaner. Live ammunition is a cute concept that doesn't grow tiresome because you need to strategize about which critters work best in different bounty-hunting situations.įugitives are worth more alive than dead, but they are harder to capture than kill. Zappflies are your only unlimited ammo, and they're ideal for collecting and retrieving other live ammo, which grazes in the game's outdoor environments.Īmmo upgrades include Riot Slugs that explode in midair and spray shrapnel and foul-mouthed Howler Punks that lure enemies into traps. The game's ammo includes Stunkz that emit a poisonous gas to choke enemies and Stingbees that can be fired machine-gun style before they swarm the outlaws. "Stranger's Wrath" is played from a third-person perspective when climbing ropes, jumping across chasms or engaging in fistfights, but you'll need to toggle to a first-person view to look through binoculars, target enemies with a double-barrel crossbow or activate a faraway switch with a projectile. Over time, the Stranger's bounties become more difficult to catch - as well as more lucrative. If you bag a baddie, you collect a cash reward you can use to buy better weapons, brass knuckles, clip extenders or stamina boosters. Consider this scenario a cross between "Star Wars" and "The Good, the Bad and the Ugly," an odd mix of science fiction and spaghetti Westerns.Īs the Stranger, you accept missions from the Bounty Store and follow a map to track down fugitives, such as Filthy Hands Floyd or The Looten Duke. You begin "Stranger's Wrath" by assuming the role of the Stranger, a bounty hunter commissioned to track down a host of bizarre outlaws. And they help to make this "Oddworld," the eighth in the franchise, the best yet. They are alien critters, such as exploding Boombats or piranha-like Fuzzles that attack the closest enemy when fired into a crowd. The weapons don't fire bullets or lasers. The gimmick in EA Games' new "Oddworld Stranger's Wrath" is its weapons system, which isn't like any you might expect. Some video games rely on gimmicks to stand out.Ĭonsider EA Games' "GoldenEye: Rogue Agent," which lets you play a bad guy in the James Bond universe or Ubisoft's "Prince of Persia" titles, in which your character can manipulate time by pausing or rewinding the game.
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