

Jackie will throw a punch, then scoot back and throw a Drunken Master Punch. Repeat this as many times as desired to get an unlimited amount of lives. After collecting it, exit the level and save the game. At the top of the ladder there is an extra life. Enter the room and kill the enemy inside. After you kill him, the light above the door will turn on. To the right side is a ninja with a stick. When you start the Roof Top level 2, jump on the elevator. Alternately, collect twenty gold dragons to unlock the Jackie Chan movie option. If you entered the code correctly, you will hear a sound. Movie theater optionĪt the "Press Start Button" screen, press Left, Right, R1, Circle, Square, Triangle(2). Jackie should change his outfit, and you will have all gold and red dragons. All DragonsĪt the "Press Start Button" screen, press L1, R2, L2, Square, X(2). I just wish the game stuck more to fighting and obstacle dodging than all that ledge-to-ledge leaping.At the "Press Start Button" screen, press L2, Square, Triangle, Circle, X, R2(2). Still, you do get a lot of levels (the best have you battling atop subway trains). Just imagine how annoying Final Fight would have been if you had to twiddle your thumbs for half a minute every time your character croaked. And here's the worst part: It takes nearly 30 seconds for the game to reload after you die.

Chan's sloppy control dropped me into too many sudden-death chasms. It makes for hundreds of frustrating moments in the second half of the game, when the levels start emphasizing platform leaping over chop socky. Kick-jump off a nearby wall and Chan slides when he lands. But while the simple fighting controls let you unleash varied combos with ease, Chan's motion-captured animation has a nasty habit of slip-sliding you in all the wrong directions.

The premise here is promising enough (and really this is the only way a Jackie Chan game should be made): As the Chan man, you toss around bad guys-as many as three at a time-in level after level of Double Dragon-inspired gameplay. Not so with the oft-delayed Jackie Chan Stuntmaster. You'd think a game that's been in development for so long would have all its kinks ironed out by now.
