One benefit that Nintendo players have over other console versions of some games is the option to unlock exclusive content through the Game Boy Advance to GameCube connection. However, players must first learn to use certain time control techniques by collecting various scrolls that are located throughout the game. When the bar indicates that there is Sand in the Dagger, players can use their ability to control different aspects of time. Using the Sand Bar, players can see when time control can be used. Instead, this Sand allows the Prince to control time. No, the Prince doesn't have a business filling up jars with sand and sea-shells like every shop in Florida does. This Dagger allows the Prince to collect Sand from fallen enemies. The entire basis behind the GBA version of Prince of Persia is staying alive and solving puzzles by utilizing the Dagger of Time. The Sands of Time also utilizes a side-scrolling camera, another attribute going back to the golden days of gaming, and a technique which is used less and less in current titles. I, for one, thought that Aladdin was a great game back in the days of the Genesis, and the same view carries through into Prince of Persia. However, this isn't necessarily a bad thing. I mean, come on, it's got an ancient middle-east setting, a main character that wears baggy white pants and carries a scimitar, and pole-jumping and avoiding pits are all but common place. Upon first playing The Sands of Time, the first thing that hit me was that it's very similar to playing Aladdin on the Super Nintendo. Players take command of the Prince, but can also control other characters at certain times, including Farah, the daughter of a conquered Indian Maharajah (don't worry, I had to sound it out too). Using the power of The Sands of Time, the Prince must return the land to peace. After finding an ancient, magical dagger, the young Prince is tricked into using it to unleash a great and powerful evil. Prince of Persia : The Sands of Time is based on none other than, you guessed it, the Prince of Persia. How does it match up with its console brethren? Read on. Luckily for Game Boy Advance owners, Ubi Soft also decided to create a portable version of The Sands of Time. Titled Prince of Persia : The Sands of Time, the new addition to the series has made an explosion on the gaming scene, and with good reason. However, being the intelligent company that Ubi Soft is, they cleverly decided to bring back the series in all its glory on today's consoles. Since then the series has become little more than a distant memory for most. Even if you manage to kill him once, he can rewind time to return with up to half of his health restored.Prince of Persia is one of the older but greater gaming franchises that, back in the day, ruled the gaming scene. That's easier said than done: the Prince can slow down time for enemies in an area around him, punish foes with spears that erupt from the floor, and instantly knock down anyone in the map with a teleporting slow-mo punch. His appearance will be heralded by a sandy tornado at the center of the map, at which point either team will be able to try to take him down to add 150 points to their score.
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