What Is It?
If your 8-bit decision hinged on the merits of Alex Kidd versus Super Mario, then there's a clear reason why you great up a Nintendo fan. It's not that all Alex Kidd games are bad, but the ones that are of any noteworthy quality are simply lucky breaks. Alex Kidd is an extremely generic experience full of questionable level designs and lame characters. And The Lost Stars, Alex's second 8-bit outing, goes a long way to prove my point. It's not that Alex Kidd: The Lost Stars is a bad game, but it manages to hit on just about every antiquated 8-bit cliche. Not only is it an incredibly dull action game, but it comes off as being incredibly lazy. For one thing, you will need to play each level more than once if you intend to beat the game. If this was a Super Mario Bros. game Nintendo would have designed another bunch of stages, but Sega opted for the easy way out by making you play each level over and over again. Since when did Alex Kidd because the star of Groundhog Day? Combine that with the lame level designs, the boring characters and the crummy controls and you have Alex Kidd: The Lost Stars. If Sega had any sense they would forget this franchise ever existed.
Does It Still Hold Up?
Maybe it's an unfair criticism, but Alex Kidd's biggest problem is that it doesn't feel like Super Mario Bros. The game is full of imprecise controls, lame attacks and gameplay that actually makes the game harder than it needs to be. If it wasn't for the terrible controls I would be able to put up with the game's many slowdowns and ugly graphics. But alas, I can't ignore all of these problems. None of the game's problems will prevent you from playing it to the end, but it's never as much fun as it could have been with a little tweaking.
Is It Worth The Money?
Alex Kidd: The Lost Stars is definitely NOT worth your money. And we were doing so well, too. For awhile there it felt like each week brought a better batch of Virtual Console games, but alas this Alex Kidd game knocks us back to reality. Those Sega Master System fans that grew up with the system may get a kick out of the nostalgia of this game, but anybody unfamiliar with Alex Kidd's exploits will be confused why anybody found this game fun in the first place. It's not the worst game on the Virtual Console, but you can just go right ahead and skip this ugly 2D platformer.