IMDb RATING
8.3/10
2.3K
YOUR RATING
Frank Castle's war on crime has him face the mafia, the Russian mob and the Yakuza as well as his famous archenemies from The Punisher comics. Along the way, he gets to briefly team up with ... Read allFrank Castle's war on crime has him face the mafia, the Russian mob and the Yakuza as well as his famous archenemies from The Punisher comics. Along the way, he gets to briefly team up with some of his S.H.I.E.L.D. allies.Frank Castle's war on crime has him face the mafia, the Russian mob and the Yakuza as well as his famous archenemies from The Punisher comics. Along the way, he gets to briefly team up with some of his S.H.I.E.L.D. allies.
Thomas Jane
- The Punisher
- (voice)
Bob Joles
- Crack Dealer
- (voice)
- …
Darryl Kurylo
- John Saint
- (voice)
- …
David Sobolov
- Kingpin
- (voice)
- …
Dwight Schultz
- Fisk Industries Guard
- (voice)
- (as Dwight Shultz)
- …
Fred Tatasciore
- Gnucci
- (voice)
- …
James Arnold Taylor
- Gnucci
- (voice)
- …
John Cygan
- Carlo Duka
- (voice)
- …
Michael Gough
- Detective Soap
- (voice)
- …
S. Scott Bullock
- Crack Dealer
- (voice)
- (as Scott Bullock)
- …
Steve Blum
- Bullseye
- (voice)
- …
Charlie Schlatter
- Tom
- (voice)
- …
Chris Edgerly
- Spacker Dave
- (voice)
- …
Daniel Hagen
- Crack Dealer
- (voice)
- (as Dan Hagen)
- …
J. Grant Albrecht
- Crack Dealer
- (voice)
- (as Grant Albrecht)
- …
James Horan
- Larry
- (voice)
- …
John Kassir
- Zoo Guard
- (voice)
- …
Loy Edge
- Crackhouse Civilian
- (voice)
- …
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Featured reviews
Better than 2004 film.
This video game presents the real Punisher, the one that should have been in the 2004 film, instead of Thomas Jane, and instead of bunch of other characters and developers who made that pu**yass film. In the film, we got Punisher who did less killing and more talking and blackmail on the villains and mafia. While, here voiced by Jane himself (he was great as a voice, dark and violent) Punisher is one mean, sick, cold blooded animal who will kill anyone who stands on his path, except of course innocent people. The plot is like a comic book, which is cool, characters... well most of them are not quite developed, except Punisher himself, Det Soap and Det. Molly, they were great. Previous characters, mostly villains are good, the evil dialogue makes them badass and somewhat irritating. Graphics are solid, not that great, action is pretty sick, there are more than 50, 60 ways to kill a guy, you can interrogate them, make them pi!! their pants if you like, that's cool. Everybody is afraid of Punisher here and I like it. The music is one bright spot here, it is great, composed by Timothy Wynn. This game is a perfect cure for all of those who loves good old violent Punisher, compared to the 2004 film. Thanks to this game, we got the good old vision of Punisher again. If you ask me... this game is better than other films as well.
This is not revenge...
I have not read an awful lot of the comics, really only a little of the Ennis run. Since this, just like the movie that it is connected to(if the relationship is a tad inconsistent... this happens after it, but also sort of during it), is based upon one of his runs, that being the series 'Welcome Back, Frank', I can tell you that it gets a ton out of the source material, and hits the tone for that version of Mr. Castle spot-on. Thomas Jane does the voice, and won't let down anyone who liked how he did in the film. The acting tends to be great, almost exclusively, and only one or two characters are miscast. Lines and dialog is somewhat mixed, with the majority being good, there being a bunch of juvenile ones, and several utterly *golden* ones. In general, audio is a high point, and everything sounds the way it should. This is impeccably well-scored, the music being a balanced mix between epic instrumental pieces and bad-ass tracks. All of the design is well-done. Nearly everything looks exactly right. The graphics are excellent. Most of the cut-scenes are in-engine, and the NPC's in these scripted sequences are immensely detailed and expressive. The rest are fully animated cinematics, and like the action, they are pure awesomeness. That brings me to the game-play. One of the problems with adapting something that's existed and been altered over decades is that one cannot include all of the different variants. Stealth is pretty much out of the question in this VG. Instead, this goes for an arcade-like style, with linear(albeit well-done, interesting, at times memorable and with reasonably varied objectives; also, while you can't save, it does so automatically every time you complete a section) levels(a dozen or one and a half total), and you taking on the role of a one-man army(I don't know if that's how he is usually portrayed). It's non-stop entertainment, that's for sure. The arsenal is really cool, and no two guns are overly alike, plus, you can dual-wield next to all of them, by picking up another one. You can only carry one set of primary, and one of secondary, firearms at a time, so you have to be strategic about what you use. For example, consider, can you keep finding ammo for what you have or not? You rack up points by switching around how you kill, as well as not getting hit yourself. There is freedom in how you take opponents out, including Quick Kills, that arguably take a little too long(since they prevent you from doing anything else during, and you are extremely vulnerable), if they do only last seconds. You can also activate Slaughter mode(its gauge determines how long you can use it, and you fill that by wasting enough baddies), where you're temporarily invincible, can throw knives and earn some health back. Then there is the possibility of taking a human shield, that makes you harder to hit as a target. In extension of that, you can Interrogate anyone you grab, and the system for it is well-done. You have to pressure the person, without pushing too hard, since you risk them dying as a result. There is a bar that you can fill, and you have to keep it in the orange portion for three full seconds, while it goes up while you are threatening them, and down when you stop. There are four kinds that you can do anywhere, and numerous location-specific ones, and it is very fun. You may get a Flashback from it, too, and there are clearly marked guys that you'll definitely want to get to spill the beans. After beating a mission, you can try its Challenge(if it has one, and close to all of them do). You replay part of what you've already finished, with a rule or similar that you have to live up to, and they are unique from each other, with few exceptions. Finally, there is Punishment, that can be compared to the Dead Man Walking bit of Max Payne 2, and same as it is in that game, it is in place of multi-player(really, how would you do MP in either of them?). Essentially, foes continually spawn, and you are to stay alive and going for a high score. You do have a set goal, and reaching it will unlock nifty stuff, namely covers and concept art. Replayability value is limited. It is, however, worthwhile to go back to earlier spots and try out later-gotten weapons. The plot isn't bad, it's well-told, it allows for guests and cameos from the Marvel universe as well as references to it, and you get to fight groups and enemies(in the form of bosses, though they are typically defeated simply by repeated blasting and/or head-shots) that are familiar and yet not dull. They are all well-chosen, and fit the fairly realistic approach this takes. The story does maybe overreach, in order to tie everything together, and it might have benefited from splitting it up in chapters that didn't relate to one another. AI is magnificent, taking cover, running away when reloading and the like. On a couple of occasions, you have allies/people to protect, and they seldom get in your way or annoy you. The bullet dynamics and rag-doll physics are well-done. Now, it's well-known, I hope, that licensed games suck. They do. It's rare that they don't. Apart from that, this was rushed, to come out when the flick did. You can tell; they took shortcuts. There are bugs and glitches(not big ones). With that said, this is a solid production, and it delivers all that it promises. There is strong language in this, and it's largely gratuitous. This also has disturbing content, and brutal, bloody violence and gore. There is no sexuality or nudity, apart from a tiny amount of spoken. I recommend this to any fan of the vigilante, this kind of gaming experience and of dark, bleak, gritty criminal-murdering. 7/10
Great game for Punisher fans out there
I have the movie for this and that was a great film, and now the game came out and that was good. To all of the Punisher fans that are out there, you should get this game that has a lot of punishment and lots of bad guys to kill. Thomas Jane is once again the punisher/Frank Castle who going to do his punishment on the next set of bad guys and he'll stop at nothing. You can do interrogations for lots of stuff and they are cool. This game should be known for the fans out there and should buy this game. It is too bad that I rented this game instead of buying it but I will try my best to get the game for good as I am one of the punisher fan and I want to do some punishment on the bad guys and become a hero in the game.
I give this a 9/10
I give this a 9/10
Wish it was on PS4
Never happen. But I loved this game. The addition of other Marvel characters. Kind of annoying that you couldn't jump. And kind of funny that you couldn't open a locked door with a shotgun. But this game was great.
Why was a sequel to this game never made?
This game was great, one of the better Marvel Comic book games I have ever played. The storyline is very good and surprising as there are other Marvel characters in this one that make appearances throughout. You also have an array of super villains scattered throughout too. The story has the Punisher doing what he does best, taking out the criminals in New York city. You also have some fun along the way as you get to interrogate the scum one person at a time. They have your basic torture methods, then along the way you have special ways to torture people such as using piranha and other very disturbing and fun means. You have the option of just killing them, getting the information you need and letting them go, or getting the information you need and then killing them which is what I did cause I just had to see the violent deaths. There are also many memorable scenes such as the opening as the Punisher throws a dude out the window and another scene where he crashes a funeral in very humorous fashion. The weapon selection is rather good as you would expect with the Punisher and once again I love the inclusion of heroes like Iron Man, and villains like Bullseye and even the Kingpin. The ending made it seem like there would be a sequel, but none has ever materialized as of yet, not even when the newest Punisher movie came out. Which I do not understand, because from what I understand this game was fairly popular.
Did you know
- TriviaA sequel was planned, where the Kingpin vowed revenge on the Punisher after destroying Fisk Industries (Level 11 in the game). Concept art for the game later surfaced online, showcasing Typhoid Mary, Elektra, Daredevil, and Deadpool as supporting characters while Nick Fury, Black Widow, and Bullseye were to return. The game was later cancelled when the production company THQ experienced financial struggles and later filed for bankruptcy.
- GoofsDamage's head falls off when he is thrown off the roof by Frank, but in the cutscene following it, Damage's head is still on his body.
- Quotes
Thug: Have mercy!
The Punisher: Death is a mercy.
- Crazy creditsDuring the end credits, we see clips of the game where cheat codes are used with great entertainment to follow.
- Alternate versionsThe British Board of Film Classification (BBFC), who at the time would often be called upon to classify games (especially those with adult content), asked that the UK release have injury detail on the "special interrogations" be toned down, which the publisher ultimately accomplished by extending the solarisation effect that is already in place. This version was passed with an 18 certificate.
- ConnectionsFeatured in This Is... Amir (2009)
- SoundtracksDark in Here
Words and Music by Tim Wynn (as Timothy Michael Wynn) and Alien Ant Farm
Performed by Alien Ant Farm
Produced by Tim Wynn (as Timothy Michael Wynn) and Alien Ant Farm
Orchestra Arranged by Christopher Lennertz
Recorded and Mixed by Jeff Vaughn at Sonic Fuel Studios
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