Thunderbirds contains two core modes of play over nine missions.[2] The first, described as a "Lost Vikings-style co-operative action game",[3] involves players clearing puzzles by controlling three characters from a top-down perspective to manipulate obstacles. Each of the three playable characters use special abilities in order to reach switches or open up a path to progress the level: Alan can jump over gaps and move crates, Tin-Tin can jump and move things with telekinesis, and Fermat can hack computers and move through ventilation shafts. The second mode features brief sections of shoot 'em upaction gameplay in which the player pilots the International Rescue fleet of Thunderbirds whilst avoiding and shooting enemies.
Thunderbirds received negative reviews, with publications critiquing the game's poor puzzle design. Dismissing the game as "the worst shooter you've ever seen", Electronic Gaming Monthly critiqued Thunderbirds as a "bad licensed game" as the product of an "uninspired development team". The magazine particularly found fault in the game's puzzles, stating "Thunderbirds' puzzles take seconds to solve and a lifetime to finish", due to "hours of backtracking and character switching" to complete simple puzzles.[8]Cube recommended readers not to purchase the game, stating that Thunderbirds featured the "clumsiest, most cumbersome (control) system...the mechanics are there, but it's just such an utter waste of time."[5] Writing for Nintendo Official Magazine, Rob Burman similarly expressed frustration with the puzzle mechanics in the game due to their "startlingly similar levels", whilst noting that the action levels "are slightly more terrible...the missions range from dull to beyond boring".[6] Craig Harris for IGN critiqued the puzzle designs, stating that "characters only have a couple of attributes that set themselves apart from each other, which means puzzle designs are just variations of the same "shove crate, hit switch, roll through vent, hack computer" idea."[3]
References
^Bramwell, Tom (20 August 2004). "What's New?". Eurogamer. Archived from the original on 21 May 2024. Retrieved 16 June 2024.